HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-29 - Orange Coast PilotDave Prj:rileges,·
Not Bias
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 29, 1977
VOL. 11, NO. 133, J HCTI'*'-• PAHi
I Second, Vieti1n ,I
OMtr ........... ., &M .. .,..
CONSTRUCTION CRANE LIFTS OUT BODY OF WORKER
Crene Earlier Wea Uaed to Uft Out Another Men Who Uved
Gates Responds
Privileges Cited
For Women Inmates
By TOM BARLEY
ot•Dtllf PIW•Wff
A woman prisoner'• alle1ation
that abe and membeta of lier sex
aro victims of diacrimlnalion at
the Orange County :.Jall has been
challenged by Sheriff Brad
Gates.
And Gates warned that if COUil·
1 ty supervisors chose to act on tbe
ro()Ommendatlons of Barbara
Dretika Molar, 42, of ~nahetm. "It 1#ould coat tho county millions
anc.t ,millions of dollars from tax·
p~era' pockets.·•
:11ra. Molar. now aervtaa a o..e y8* couaty jall term on a dr'uc
use ,(onvlction. d1lmed ln • Jaw,swtmees Monday that women
prliOacn are beln1 dehled man.v fr~m• and ptlvUe1e1 lC· coinle~ to male lrimates. P.41 pointed out In a Su.-,rtor ccuart lav.-ault that women
pr,ttoners are rtot allowed to join
Accidents
In Irvine
Probed
By PIDUP llOSMAlllN oe .. o.11,,....,., ....
A construction worker. aweeR-
lng catwalks at an Irvine sewage
plant project as a safety measare
after another employee fell MQfl·
day, backed into an open hole in a
catwalk and dropped to bis
death. PoUce sald Leon Llamas; 6', 'ot
San Fernando, fell 28 feet to the
concrete flooring of an open
sewage tank, striking the side of
his head. He was killed instantly.
Both accidents at the Irvhle
Ranch Water District project off
Michelson Drive are under in·
vestlgation by a state safety
agency. Jim Brown, districl
manager or California Occupa· •
tional Safety Health Act's
division of industrial safety, s.Jd
an invesUaation or working COO·'
ditions at the site would take
several days.
Water district officials said
they were shocked by the acci·
dents, the most serious in di.strict.
history. The sewer plant expansion
project ls belni administered by
the VTN Corp., a majot county
coptractor. The constr:uction con·
tractor ii Maecon Inc.
Only two hours before the fatal
accident, 50-yeai··old Bill White
of Anaheim fell from sc:~f old.lna
atop the tronwork eewer vault.
Wblte broke bll bacll, anCl t.b6 project foreman said he may
have been saved from death by
fallln1 onto a plle of plywood.
(See FALL. Page AJ)
RRJ~ , a. (AP) -A 32-year~ld :.otoce
manager ac a Jt».4ximum penal_ty of 60't yemj in
prison &na:~ of.tif to $1.3 million after pleadirig
guJlty to J.$i counts o making threatening telepbone
calls.
Mitchell Beck wittidrew his guilty plea to the
charges last summer .tter a judge refused to honor a
plea-bargaining •rraniement under which the max·
lmumpenaltywould)latebeenlhreemonthsinjail.
On Monday, Beck entered guilty plea$ agatn, this
time withlhe uoderstar)ding that sentencblg would be
left to the discretion of MontgoD\ery County Presiding
Judge lUcbard Lowe.
Assistant District Attorney Lois Hagarty showed
Lowe the transcripts of statements by four persons
who said they received threatening calls from Beck,
who allegedfy demanded that they perform sexual
acts and describe them over the telephone.
• Beck was arrested Dec. 15 abopt six montlas after
' state and local police and Bell Telephone security of·
ficers set up an el~borate computtrlzed telephone
moni~twork, police Mid.
, ,
r'
,,
WASlllNGTON <AP) -An
elaborate South Korean In·
te~nce plan to plaat an in·
telbgencl' network In the White
llouse. hire collaborators in the
oCfic?~i. of t·ongrcssional leaders
and pay off and mu.n1pulate U.S
JOurnahsts, professors and olbcr
persons was releued today by a
House subcomm1U.ee.
The 23 pag<' plan, approved by
the di.rector or thl' Korean Cen·
tral lntclligcncc Agency 1n
2 Brothers
Face Rap of
Extoriion
Two brothers who allegedly
warned a San Juan Capistrano
man that they would show rus
wye pbotocraphb that. depicted
hi1' relation1b1p w1t1l his
girlfriend if he did not hand over
$4J>OO have l>ccn ordered to !ace
ar15lignmcnl Dec 8 10 Orange
Co4nt v Supenoc Court
Waller BenneU.e Crowe, 38, of
13751 Edwards St. We!>lminster,
and Kenneth Douelas Crowre, 30,
of 17272 Ash St., Hunt1ngton
Beoach , race court action on
churges of extorttoo and con-
spiracy.
They ~ere arrested last Sept.
28 after the older brother alleged·
ly attempted t.o pick up a paper
bag from the rear of a market Ill
Mttgnoh~ Street and Warner
A >1enue m Fountain Valley
I Arresting officers u1d Crowe
ac,tcd lJ1 the belief that the bag
c()fltained $4,000 m u sh that the
defendants allegedly demanded
from ~ vidim in return for
photographs and nc~at1vcs.
Fro•PageAJ
FALL •.•
stacked at the bottom
lie was listed m stable condi·
tion today at. Tustin Community
Hospital
Police sa.\d lheY were 'lot8 by
construction boc;ses that Llamas
\\-as afterward assi~ned tos~ep
all catwalks or sarid and other
debris, as a precaution against
further acei~ent,.,.
Ile apparently swept in' .a
backward-moving dlre<:t1on .
Llamas fell through a 22-inch b'y
36·inch 1'ole in the catwalk
through which a ladder Is
normally placed to climb Into the vault. ,. ' ·
There was no ladder'in place ai
the time, police said.
Afler the accidept, construe·
tion worl(ers covered up the
opening with a plywood boald,
police srud.
Decembe 1975. en stqned $100·&:~ f)ayoff s t.o at least
14 emplo)ies of the White House,
the State and Defense depart·
menls and the CIA. The payofta
wer~ labeled "manipulation ex·
penses. ••
The plan also envisioned pay-
ments of at'1eul ~.OOl tor con-
aresaloqal contribull~1 ~nd
"special manipulallon • pay-
ments to al leasl 10 persons in an
effort to influence congressional
support for South Korea.
T~ I> an wa• released al
public bearings l>1·• Hquse in-terna\looal relatioQ& subeoqami~
tee on KCIA actiVtties in the
United States.
H ~parently was obtained fro~ ffp Y~c. wbo.tdect·
ed as the KCl'A's etatlon chief in
New YQrk City last Septtmber
and wllO Wai the leadoff Wftness
at the hearing~.
rn 1lll openil\(I stat.emtnl, sub-
commi~ ·cb~an Donald M.
Fraser. <Minn.), accused the
KCIA of "outrlghtsubvel'$iOD" in
its effort to car:ty out tlae plan,
~h.ich ~to gain supporUor the ~ovemment of Pretidenl Park
Chung-hee among U.S. leaders.
Fraser gave no indication how
much of the plan was act•ally
carried out.
However, a month after the
plan vJas distributed to KClA
a.gen.ts around the United States,
the South Korean errort to in·
fluence Congress and govern-
ment leaders wa& being widely
ex~sed in U.S. newspapers.
One subcommittee me mbeT.
Rep. William Goodling, IR·Pa.).
said Korean efforts to carry put
the plan apparently were tut
s hort by the pubUcity.
The plan envisioned paying
three .. u" .. amta Whit~ House
aides '100 a month to ltnplant the
intelligence netWork there.
Another three aidd were to be
paid $100 a monUl lo ''strengthen
lies with W," sa\d to be an un ·•
named State Department aide,
and another three persons in the
Defense Department were to be
paid the $100 a month to · 'ooncen·
tratedly infiltrate" the militarr
aid d1v1si00Ulere.
The plan also en visioned paytns
five persons in U.S. intelligence
agencies $100 a month to
strengthen cooperation.
The plan envisioned hiring
three "pajd ~ollaboralot~" at
S500 a month in what W'tls er-
roneously listed as the "oCfice of
the Speaker (Senate and House >.
office of secretariat."
Another goal of the plan was to
hire at least two American re-
porters. try lo win support
specifically among reporters al
t h e~ New York Times ,
Washington Post and Christian
Science MonHor and
"manipulate" two news or·
ganizations, the names of which
were deleted from the copies of
the plan distributed.
11 Strangled
.
Sesbt orS~t1 ·
An anonnnous grarriti writer apparently
didn't thlnk ID\ICh of this billboard neat
downt.o~ SeatU•. But the chortnelJ keep
dancinf, oblivious to the ''tattoos" added ~
Longshoremen
Vote on Pact '
NBW "ORK (AP) -
Loog$horemen voted today on a
proposed c tract to end a nlbe·
week str e againat con·
tainerablps ln 34 Atlantic and
Gulf coast ports from Maine to
Texas.
Members of Loeal 824 or the
50,000·member International
Longshoremen 's Association
here began votiJig al 7 a.m. at
union olfi~s acrosa from the
Hudson Jlt\ter dock.a.
r.....,Pflfll! AJ
OOUY •.• . .
ducted, raped and strangled and
their bodies dumped in a remote
location from a car that st.opped
only briefly t.o avoid ~iog seen,
hence the ~aod-go tai. Tb~ eitJlt cases wert evidently
not related lo several other
bodies found in the area this
month~pollce ha~e said.
Initially investigators included
on their list the November deaths
or Theresa Berry, 19, of Pomona,
Terry J1U Barcum, 18, of New
York, Margaret Elizabeth
Madrid, 7, of Valinda and an un-
1dent1f1ed girl foun d in the
Wilshire District, but later de-
cided dis111milarit1es in those
cases probably ruled out a con·
nect1on with the stop-and-go
strangler.
They also discounted tne stop·
and-go connection 1n the death of
u young woman found Monday in
the Lennox area and the body of a
mnn found beside a Long Beach
J:o'reeway offramp this morning.
* * *
WASJllNGTON (AP) -ne
Marine Corps lost its 21st Harrier
vertical takeoff attack plane al
sea off Okinawa early today, the
Marines announced. The p1lol
was rescued. The latest loss follows by one
day the damagin( of another
$3.3-milllon British-made Har·
rier al Kadena Air Base on
Okinawa.
Of lhe uo Harriers bought by
the M.artne Corps, 28 have been
involved in craabes.
The latest lwo come J1 a time
when the corps has been trying to
convince Defense Secretary
Harold Brown to keep money in
the defense budget t.o develop an
advanced version of the revolu·
tionary plane.
Up to now, Brown has withheld
a decision on whether to allow
about $161 million, or to reduce
that amount, or to eliminate it
entirely from the budget for fis·
cal 1979.
For eight years, the Marine
Corps has put its weight behind.
the Harrier which it. considers an
ideal concept under which planes
l',....P9ffeAJ
JAIL .•. Fear Grips Women
jail duties "
Gates said the lawsuit filed by
attorney Lawrence Buckley
overlooked the fact that women
prisoners jn the Santa Ana cen·
lral jail actually enjoy privileges -
not available lo male inmates.
•'They participate in work
furlough programs, are often al·
lowed to serve their lime through
jail weekends and they earn ex ..
tra time off and privileges by
such activities as sewing." Gates
sa}d. 'Certainly, we could Jmple·
mtnt. an equal rights proiram on
the lines s ugaesled in tbe
laws uit," Gates said. "!Jut I
think it's unnecessary and l thio.lc
the laxpayen will scream w~
they are told what.it would cost.'
In Nortlieast &A
Outatandlng diamond solitaire earrtn09 In 811 1iz.n ..
and shapes, ranging from ·
SIOteSl.OH
-·
,.._._ ...
:·~.1\T T ' I
~~-· .. ...
-·
aive testimony, possibly
videotaped, for preservation in
caee they are tater unavailable.
Deputy Dl1trlct Altorne,Y, D Did -enlj are
expected to be taken from Frank
Rossi, Anthony Marone Sr., Rick
WJUJs and Debbie Additon.
Ropi bU .bceo trantec! Im·
munlb lmid atr.ad1 has testifled
before the arand jury that bas haqded down elstil murder in·
C1l<!'tmedts stemming from the
Oct. 22 l!,liootlng death or Bovan
outside a Newport Beach
restaurant.
Rosal told U. araod jury in
tettlmony J>Nsened In the
transcripts lb.it be wn one or
fl ve men who were oHered
$25,000 t.o kill Bovan Jnd two
other men. ,
Rossi' testified ti.at Uae offer
was maCle by ---priftcipals in
Prasadam Dlstrib~ loterna·
Uonal, ltte. The Newport Beach
nrm is sold by local police to
have connections with an In·
' teoiaUQDal drug distdbutlng or·
ganizallon and wit:li ~e Hare
Krishna religious sect. 1 Poll~ ~laim lbat. the plot to kill Bovan .temm~ trom. Bon.n•a
decl•lo.n to kid.nap Pr&udam
lead r Al4'under K.uJlk a.ad
could be· based io small
clearinp rigbt behtnd the baUle
line to provide immediate bomb-
ing support for the itlfantey:
Unlike conventional jets, the Ha~riers lake off atraiibt up and
do not require long concrete
runways.
The advanced A VBB Harrier
would c:ost about twice as much
as the original British design in
use in tbe ?darlne Corps. The
Marines eventually want 352 ot
the AV8Bafor combat. • •
The corps sald that a Harrier
went lnto the sea before dawn 21
nautical miles west·northwest or
Kadena and that "the pilot eject·
ed safeJy and was recovered bra
search and rescue bellcopter. •
According ~ the announce·
menl, the plane was on a ni&ht
training mission and an fo.
V~stigatiOD Of the loss is UD·
.derway.
I '' In Monday's incident, the
Marine Corps said, a Harrier
was damaged in landing at
Kadena. The pilot suffered minor
bruises, a Marine Corpa
spokesmansaid. 1
bold him ror raJtSom. Ku Uk. 2' of Newport Beam, ts
the only 1uspeQ1 curreptty fNe cm
ball. Polle:~ assert tb tu.sped
Jerry .Peter' 11ori, '1, of 198ZZ Brqokhurat St., H'9ntin1toa
Beach, llas ad.In Utd to~ tbe
tri11ermu rn the BoVan1la1in&.
F.iori 3 belnc beld wlthiout
1>0sslblUt.y «bail. while 1mpecta
Marone and Resco remain in
cusU>dy in lieu of $100,000 bail
each.
Monday, Flori's attorney
David Brickner entered a plea of
not cultty to drug cbarses
against b1s client. Fiori wu ar·
reated by Costa Mesa police. al·
lecedly in possession of cocaine.
Brickner also denied that his
client was a federally relocated
w1tneS'S, but admitted t.hat a
"vendetta" has been usued by
an unknown party against Fiori'•
fartiUy.
Fiori la due back In municipal
court Dec. 8 for arraitnment 'Oil
his drug arrest.
K\llik also faces separate drug
charges stemming from his ar·
rest in Mission Viejo. ·Kulik re-
portedly was found tleeping in a
leased $80,000 Stutz automobile
wllh 1.1 pounds of nearly pure
beroill in the c:•r.
Stitt being aouabt are Kullk's
wife, Elsie, Roy Richard, JOMPb 1
Davu and Joseph Fedorowski.
Prose.cl.Col' Clllf Davi.a said Mon-;.
.daythatbee!tpeetaDavi.atobear· :
rested soon by the FBI. Fellow 1
prosecutor 1>ave Carter said
Davia is not in the immediate
area.
. ,
_----_ ........... _:_-~-------~= -=------------------~
By .IAClll& MAN Of_....,,.,... .....
Meteorol<>&illl 1&1cl today that
altbouab Oranee County's air
haa been relatively free of pollu·
tanta lhia wee~. Sal\ta Ana wind
conditions may be 1Urrin1 up the
same miaerable 1ymptom11 reai·
dents have come to associate
with pollution. •
Roaer Hill of the National
Weather Service aald dust and
Pollen stirred up by the winds,
U.N. UFO
Debates
Opened
UNITED NATIONS <AP >
Prime Minister Erle Gairy or
Grenada opened the flrst U.N.
debate on UFOs. then led the
diplomats to the movies to see
"Close Encount~rs of the Third
Kind."
''This ls the fulfillment of my
very high expectullon . . . The
world is looking on," the leader
of the 12·by 21·milc island In the
Caribbean told the General As·
sem bly's special political com·
mittee made up of delegates
from all 149 U.N. members.
Gairy told a reporter Monday
night of his own <'lose encounter
"2' :i years ago, when I was driv·
ing home at 2 or 3 In the morning.
.. It was a big object, a brilliant
h~ht, golden bright, moving at
tremendous speed," he con·
tmued ... It was on at a distance. I
couldn "t tell how far. It lasted
perhaps three minutes. I'm not
the only one. Other people on
Grenada have seen them."
His speech to the political com·
mitlee was brief, and then he and
his party went off to dinner and
un evening with Hollywood's
latest foniy into the world of un·
identified flying objerls.
The film's distributors pro-
vided 300 free tickets for U.N.
diplomats in advance or the de·
bate. The tickets were distrib-uted throug111 the Grenuda del-
eg atlon. The Grenudans also
hunded out 300 free copies of a
paperback book on Ul<'Os.
The solidly built, bespectacled
Gairy. who intersperses religious
thoughts in hls UFO speeches,
began his campaign two years
ago. lo an address to the Geneul
Assembly then, he called for a
U .N. investigation of p§ychic
phenomena. Last year. in
another assembly speech, he pro·
posed that Uli'Os be studied also.
Gair}' is not the only head of
government lo have reported a
UFO sighting. President Caner
says he sow one in Georgia in
1973. But Gairy is the only na-
tiona I leader who has made
UFOs a key concern of bis coun
try 's foreign policy.
Galry has accused some na-
tions --which he does not lden-
tlf y publicly -of stlnlng ln·
formation they have collected
about UFO siehtings.
He has submitted a resolution
to the assembly callin1 for crea·
tton of a U.N. agency to conduct
UFO research and to coordlnate
the findings of individual nations.
The United States, for one, op·
J>OSeS the idea.
Tot Succumb'
To Accident
FRESNO CAP) An infant
found face·down ln a toilet has.
died less than a week before his
flrat birthday.
The coroner's offico reported
that Colen Michael Jones and his
2-)'ear-old brother Paul were
playing in the toilet at the family
• home here Nov. 20.
'I'tle ol~er boy ran to his
roother, saying aomethinl was
wrong, and sbe found Colen ln U\e
toilet wtth th~ lld on hls back.
, 11rw1r.-•
SHE CAN'T STAND PEOPLE-EVEN HUSBAND
Janette Tate With 'Understanding' Mete, Steve
Stay AwaY-!
Woman Allergic to Everything
YORK, England CAP> -It's nothing personal, but Janette
Tate says she can't stand people, even her husband $eve.
Janette, 21 , is allergle to human beings. She said she is al·
lergic to cats, dogs, horses, trees, flowers and feathers as weU,
bul people really bother her. Crowds make her wheezy and lt.chy.
and her husband's embrace makes her break out in red blot<:hes.
"IT'S A DIFFICULT SITUAnON," said Steve, 23. ''I try to
be understa;1ding, but I'm only human. As Janette says, that's
the problem."
Mrs. Tate says· "We've been married for over two years, but
even now kissing can be a problem for us. Ir It's too pauloOAle the
area around my mouth goes bright red -tt'a ernba.rrassing to
know 1 can't kiss my husband without my friends knowh1g about
it.
"Obviously Steve likes to get close. He's been very uo-
derstanding, but l can't expect him to keep three feet away from
me all the time."
MRS. TATE WORKS AS a dressmaker in a large room where
she can keep her distance from colleagues, but shoppiDI -OJI. vislt·
Ing a busy bar for an evening drink maker. her ml.terable.
"It's ruining my social life," she said.
Mrs. Tate noticed her allergies 10 yeara ago, b Ubougbt she
would grow out of them. • ...
DR. WILLIAM DAVIDSON, AN allergy jpeciaW.l lo this
northern English city, said the ca.s~ is unueual but not unique.
"Some people are physically aerect~ by the pretence or
other people," be said. "The severity vanes from case to case,
but I believe we'll be able to help Mrs. Tate with lnJecUons and
tablets."
return durint the weekend arid
on Monday 1ocated bis car on
Uiahwoy 38 just above ~zusa. Tbe
fatber·ln-law, Sidney Westlall,
then notllied sberifrs deputies.
.
Jama Stephen Gano, ~·
teased ''Baseball Cap Ban<lit''
and heroin addld who robbed 38
bank.I in Orange and Los Aneel-
countles, has been aentencod to
is years ln federal prison.
Gano, 28, was sentenced Mon·
day tn Loi Anett~. He tdmitted
steallng $40,000 in unarmed
forayr on bank• but aaid he
believed hi• non-violent tactics
should wtnhim a lesser senwrtce.
However, U,S. Distrlet Judge
Warren J. Ferswion dlsaareect.
tellJng Gano the ''enormity" of
hls crime dictated stiff punish·
ment.
Gano was taken into c~tody in
Au1uat by Newport BeHb detec·
lives for queatlonlnal tn the still·
unsolved murder or his former
girlfriend, 29-year-old Jane Ellen
Benainilon of Corona del Mar.
Althouah nano was cleared of s~picion in that case, he landed
in trouble when he tried to pay ore
several outstanding traffic war-
rutl wltb 100 crisp, new $10
bllls.
'J'be bills were traced to a
$1,300 robbery drller that dty at
the California Fvat National B41n~tn Huntinlrton Beach.
GanQ, who fit the (leacrlptioo of
a basebidl·cap-wearlna robber
suspected in Qther holdups, was
charged in the cue.
The s~pect re tedly told
autho.ritidt he wa a heroin a~·
CAJnvict Ge'-' A
Almy, Barely
NEW YORK CA > .-... -,..
prjsoJltr ta ten o Bellevue.
Hospital -'ler ~ glalning o~
stomach cramps walked naked
through the ~Us1 down lh• .trs
and out of the tQSttt on ~r
taking a sboWer. .. ,..,
He passed a guard ct¥nng his
walkout Monday, but th• guard'I
head was turned because be W85 J
opening the door for a woman in
a wheelchair.
Police said lhe escapee,
Harvey Adolphos, 25, of Manhal·
tan, left a trail of we• footprints
as he marcped down tM 1,,oth
Ooor corridor and vanished l..W a
stairwell.
Police arrested him ear in
the 'day on er and larceny and dJ11·
orderly conduct char1eea.
A Costa Mesa man, miaslna
since Friday, is being hunted
with tracking dop today in the
mountainQus area above Azusa,
the Los AnJelea County Sheriff's
Department reported:.
Augustus Herman Wulf, 38, of
1181 Tanager 1>Ht/e, lef\ a °*
Friday sayil)g he was solna hlk· ing In the area and would be back
that afternoon, 1heriff'1 Sgt.
Jack MUlerllJlfd.
..There'I no 1ign tight now of
toul play or anything: we're ju.st
ml11tn1 the man,,. Seraeant
Mlller aald,
He said Wulf'• father·ln-law
became alarmed w.ben he didn't
He sold a i'olden shepherd dog tl\at Jct0mpanltd Wulf was·
found ¥6rida)' afternoon in good
condlti()ll but was unable to lead.
woutd·be rescuers to his owner
"We are in extremely tritlcal
.Ji'ie conditions,'' Capt. Bruce
!Turbevllle ol the Ora.nae County
Fire Department said today
OS ANGELES (AP> -Ar·
r,ot,nrnent of Ii ve reputed
Whther Underground members
~n charges of ~lracy &Rd
possesslng explosives has been
delayed until Decembet.
Municipal Court ~udge
M1ch1el Bur~ Monday put ofr
the action until De . 14 after the
fi'ie "rsued they were UD· p,.p~ to defend themselves,
The ckfendants, who have been
tentatively aranted the right to
act as their own attorney • said
their ligal papers had been con·
fiscated when they were booked
at the ~ount.y jail Ndv. 19.
·rwo of the dereodants were ar-
reJted ln Los Angeles and tbree
In Houston. Texas, after FBI
naentS' s~d they. dts~overed
plan lot a l)Urp(>rted series of as-
sauhtaUona and bomblnaa.
Aaen~ said th• alleged plot
would hav& begun with the Nov.
19 bOmbinl of Republican state
Sen, John Briggs' Fullerton of·
fice.
Gano's lawyer ha 120 daya to
petition for a redu~ entence. •
If Monday's aenleACe stand&, :
Gano will pol be 'jll&lble for
parole for at eaat five 1ean
Judlt.hEn\Uy Bissell, 33, Leslle
'Mt1lin, also known aa Catt\erf~, .
May GUlesple, Sl, and Clayton, ·,
Van Ludearaf, 62, were b~ l:
in from Houston. Thoma ·
Michael Justesen, 27, and Mare • ·
Curtis Perry, about 30, were ar-•
rested at a house In Echo Park,
near downtown Los Anaeles. •.
All have been charied iu state
complaints with conspirfCY to
possess and wtth possession of .,
destructive devices. The federal
aovernment aJao haa c:harged
them with ~nsplracr to violate
the U.S. Firearms Aci and with
,posseaslon or an unreaistered 1
bomb.
Strike Halta
• DAIL V PILOT
IUCKYTICKY POLITIX: How
would you like to be employed
where you have to commute 400
miles to work. re.apply every
two years just to keep the Job and
every time you turn around,
somebody is announcing they
want your position?
After a short IJme of suUering
under these conditions, you
would probably seek employ·
ment elsewhere in some job
where you didn't always have lo
sit with your back protected by a
w~ll.
THIS DOESN'T, however,
seem to be the incllnatlon of one
Ron Cordova, the Democrat
from El Toro, who i1t our 74th Dis·
trict a~semblyman for our
southern coastline and the Sad·
dleback Valley.
Cordova, a former Orange
County deputy district attorney,
got himself elected ln the heavily
GOP 74th District in 1976 when
the two leading Republican can·
dldates held a s hootout and
knocked each other off.
These people were auto dealer
Jim Siemon!> and former
Newport·Mesa school trustee
Marion Berget1on Slemona beat
Bergeson an a Republican
Primary upset. Bergeson then
challenged in the general elec·
lion, pitching herself into the
race against GOP standard·
bearer Slemons and Democrat
Cordova as a write· in candidate
Wh en the political smoke
cl eared, Cordova was packing
his bags for Sacramento
CORDOVA .HARDLY got hls
Assembly seat warm in the
capitol before the Republicans
went into a knee·jerk reaction
and started campaining against
him.
Mrs Bergeson announced she
would run In the next GOP
primary. This drew public ink.
And then came the Maybe Can·
dictates.
Former Newport Beach police
chief B. James Glavas became a
Maybe Will Run This made the
papers.
From the far reaches
downcoast, a woman named
• Kathy Alli EJser anhOd a
GOP Maybe. She dtew niotetQk.
And all this 11, bappeeln1 here
in November The prlmary'tlec·
hon asn'h&ntil June.
Former ehief Glavas, who"ts>w
envislona the cartclldato cho as
u tiftle•conaumer, l'as
withdrawn. •
You coUld suggetl ht withdrew
before be drew.
CORDOVA i.ttJST be boaltled
by all lhll Republican ~aneu~r
ing. It is gettine where you fl1t1re
any Republican who admit. he
knows where the 14th District Is
will be considered a poM!\dal
candidate and •et bis mupbot
slappel) 1Qto print.
Ir the number or GOP can-
~idates start looking like a la\Ul·
dry list, several can abruptly
withdraw. You could fold it up, or
stretcl\_it, like an accordion.
DEMOCRAT CORDOVA,
m eanwhile, keeps further con·
foundilll the GOP accordion list
by J)tu1glng away up in
'Sacramento. voting like a reg·
ular Orange Countlan. He snuba
the liberal lobby. and hangs in
there conservative, maybe just a
)itt1e right of John Wayne or
.Barty Goldwater.
In the end, Cordova 's right·
)landedness may give the GOP
more trouble than Its own laun·
dry list.
SYDNEY, AustraUa <AP> -A
hijacked Vietnamese lrelahter
carrying 178 refugees and the
three soldiers they held captive
since commandeerina the vessel
2•,1 months ago arrived \odMy iDJ
the northern port city of Darwin.
Deputy Prime MioiAter Dou&
Anthony confirmed the small
coastal freighter Song Be 12 was
hijacked near Saigon by a group
of refugees.
«E TOLD REPORTERS
Australian poUce went aboard
ttrn steel·holled 150·foot freighter •
at Darwin, but the refugees were
stiJl holdi'ng the soldiers.
Chka90'• Golden Bare
Smiling men, women and
children waving anti·Commu~t
posters and banners crowded the
decks as the Song Be 12 was
escorted into the harbor by
Australian patrol cr•lt. Oraped
acrOf!S the m•ln cablo WMS 8
larger banner lettered in
En~Jish ... The South Vietnamese
Anti·Communisl Refugees."
Darwin dockworkers, upset at
the growtng lnfiux of Vietnamese
Into Australia, went on strike and
called the arrivals "pirates.
brothel keepers and drug run·
ners.''
With the high inching only to Z1 Sunday,
Chicagoan Mike Jocic takes a swim in
Lake Michigan. after strippina to his
trunks and rubbing snow on his chest.
Later he joJged on the snow-covered
beach. "I have a golden bear and &olden
blood,•• he said. "I go fat a awtm and my
blood runs gold.•· Probably also cold.
''IT 18 MY underatandina the
soldiers want to return to Viel·
nam.·• Anthony aald. ••of course.
they will be ~owed w do so." as
will anyone else wisblng..to re·
turn. The others will be allowed
to stay, he added.
'Open' "!Ji'lfo.rce Soug.ht
•
Wallace's Wife Claim8 'Bias' in Judge
Immigration officials uid
there were 181 people aboard the
vessel, including 21 crewmen,
three soldiers. 70 women and
several childr~n
"As far as I am aware. none of
the crew, apart from the thr ..
soldiers, has asked lo be sent
back to Vietnam." said Les
Leveris, local immigration of·
ficial.
Anthony said the govern·
ment was attempting to de·
termine ownership or the veasel
If it belongs to the Vietnamese
government It will be sent back.
but so far the government has not .
requested its return, he said.
MONTGOMERY, Ala. CAP) -
Arguments over whether divOl'Ce
proceedings involving Gov.
George C. Watlace and his wife,
Cornelia, should be open to lbe
public have been t.akep under ad·
visement by a state a_ppe•ls
court
After a OO·minute hearing Mon·
day. the Alabama Court of Civil
Appeals did not indicate when it
would rule oo a request by Mrs.
Wallace's attorneys to open the
proceedings. Her lawyers also
asked the court to disqualify
from the case Montgomery
Family Court Judge John W.
Davis Ill, who ordered the arjtu-
Hughes' Will ·,ury
Gets Eong Preview
LAS VEGAS (~P> -Mem~ of a jury aelected to decide whether
Howard Hughes aclually authored Ule so·o.alled "Mormon Will" are
getting a lengthy preview of Che evidence and testimony they will hear
over the next few months,
The trial ~fore CJark County District Judge Keith Hayes pits
Hughes' relatives, who claim the
purported will l• a forgery,
against former Hu.hes aide
Noah Dietrich and his 'ttorney,
Harold Rhoden of Los Aruleles.
The thr~·pa1e, bandscrawled
document found ln the Mormon
Church headquarters at Salt
Lake City about three weeks
after Hughes' death names
Dietrich as the executor or tht·
vast estate.
RHODEN, WHO BEGAN hls
ooerUne statement Monday, was
expected to wind up today, With
James Dilworth of JfoustoQ and
Paul Freese of Loi Angel ... ta\er
telling the jury about lr due
for Hughes' relaUYa.
Teatimony wUl notU»e&l unW
Thursday mornlna at tbt
earliest.
There is just one queatlon at
hand , but testimony •nd
evidence HI expected to reveal
Howard Huihes the man.
RHODEN TOLD TU£ jury
Monday that he will call medical
experts who will say Hughes' ec·
centrlcily was characteristic of
<in ailment that killed him -
kidnef dJsease.
RhOden also said the dl:iease
might have been caused by drug
abuse. which began in 1946 when
Hugh es s tarling taking
phenaclthin.
When used to excegs,
phcnaclthin can cause kidney
problems. Rhoden said.
RHODEN SAID A. pathologist
who performed an autopsy on
Hughes' body wUJ testify that
Hughes had kidney disease for
about 10 years before he died.
and that'other medical experts
will testify as to the effects
kidney disease (uremic poison·
Ing) can have on lbe brain.
Rboden claims the disease is
the answet to Hughes '
sometimes bizarre actions, In·
eluding the many misspellings
and errors of grammar in the
wlll.
men ts held bebind closed doori.
WALIACE, FORBIDDEN by
state law from running for a t.hlrd
consecutive t.erm a.s governor.
has announced hi• candidacy for
the U.S. Senatt ln next year's
elections.
Attorney Johll P . Kohn of
Montgomery, representtnr Mn.
Wallace, told the court Monday:
"Darkness •nd secrecy have
always been what a tyrant
wants. Can we have It in
Alabama?"
Wallace 's attorneys have
argued that the proceedings
should be clos9d because of a st4le law aMng a trial Jud•e the
di,cretion to exclude the public
from ctvll cases involving,
among othe~ things, divorce.
WALLA •s ATTORNEYS,
Headed by Maur>' Smlth of
Montaomery, aaJd the law pro-
vides adequaU rrounds for dos·
Ing the procffdinc to tbe public
and press.
Mrs. Wallace's attorneys said
that Davis' "long, close, friendly
relationship" with Wallace pre·
vents him from beartna the case
"without biaa."
Attorney lra DeMent said
Davis had given Waltac4S
""Special and irrekular t.teat·
ment" in the case. lie added that
there was a ''secret meeUna"
between Davis and Wallace's at..
torneys concernin& the cov-
ernor 's divorce petition.
SMITH SAID AN altldavlt
submitted by Mrs. Wallace's at..
torneys about lbe. alJeeed secret
meeting waa "untrue." He did
not elabOrate.
In her dlvorce cqunter·auit..
~rs. Wallace. 38, accused the
covernor or c:ommlttlng "actual
violence and cruelty'' against
her. Wall~. SS, who filed for
divorce first, said his alx·year
marriage was marked by "in·
compatibility" and an "ir·
retrievable breakdown."
NATION /WORLD
Mexican
T;ravel
'Safer'
WASKINGTON (AP) -
Americans travellna ln nortbem
MeJ(lco no longer need to fear un-
due baraument frOm bandlta,
the State Department aaya.
A wamlnc llaued to pn>tpec·
tlve tourists Jut December "no
Joneer applle." becauae of hn-
proYed security on Mexlcaa
roads ~ a abarp drop in the
number o' lncldents lnvol'ring
American tourists, Frank Rando
of the department's passport of·
flee 1a1d Monday. •'TbOre II no
longer a problem down there ...
LAST YEAR, American
tourista were plaaued by rob-
be r lea and other violence,
particularly ln the Mttlcan state
of Sinaloa. In one or the worst in-
c Iden t a, two American
clergymen and the d.autbt.er of
one were robbed and murd~
by bandtts on the road from
Duranio to Mazatlan.
At al\Qther point armed Kex·
lean troops patrofed the BIUa
California be_.che• to protect
Am~ricans.
After the issuance of the trayel
warning, however, Mexican tov·
ernment omctaJ1 rnponded
promptly to su11e1Uons for lm·
provement from both the state
Department and the AmerlQan
AutomobileAasoclatlon.
"THEY ABE concerned about
u .S. tourism. They need it." said
Steve Dobrencbuk of the State
Department'• consulJr office in
Washlngton. ~
Amona the improvements ctt0
ed by the department and the
AAA are a doublln1 of tbe
"Green Angel" mobile police
unJt. along lbe h11hway1 that bad
been trouble spots, eued recule-
tions that allow Americana to take
CB radi01 over the bOrder, and a
24-hour t•)\olUne" telephone
number to which tourists may call
5or-1.d.. · ,
I ;
WINTER CHILLS
M4YSUBSIDE
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tim
winter shouldn't be •• lrtlid aa
last. year's, allhou1b nortbem
and central portions of the COUil--
try may experience Jawer than
normal temperatures, the Na·
tional Weather Service reporta.
In lta annual December.
February forecut. the Weather
Service said Monday there ii a fS
percent chance that tem-
peratures will be colder than
normal in the far northern part of tbe country.
I
I
STATE / SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Bank Settles
Two Lawsuits
SAN 1''RANCISCO <AP> -Crocker National
Bank. the fourth laraest in California, hu aettled
two class action federal suits cbargJn1 dbcrtmlna-
tlon against women and minonUes.
In court records disclosed Monday. U.S. Dia·
tract Judge Charles 8. Renfrew approved the settle·
ment in which the bank didn 'l adml\ 1uUt. Tbe court
set no UmJt on the amount ot money involved.
THAT ORDER ALSO says the bank hasn't
violated any federal , state or local laws or l'el\ll•·
boos in 1ts employment practices.
The muscle in the settlement came In ita
establishment or a procedure for handUn1 in·
dividual comphunb of race and sex bias in bank
promotions and pay.
"WE WERE NOT lookin1 for a lump sum
pnyofC," said Doris Levine, one of four named
plaintiffs in the original suit. "We wanted a settle·
ment that would compensate all class membera.
"And this settlement agrees to give full relief to
every class member who was <tiscnmlnated aialnst
on account of sex or race at Crocker "
CLASS MEMBERS include some 21,000 women
and minorilleti employed at Crocker between 1973
and 1977
LOS NlCELES CAP> A comrolU.ee overse
in& children's teJevlail>n h•• uked the Fed ral
CommunlcatJons Commlsslon to bOld heartn1 on
the violent CJU'tOOns It QJaima seven local stat.Jons are airing.
The Committee on Children'• Television said
Monday it hu ftled an Informal objection to renew-
ing the statlona' licenses ~~use "after several months ot studylni the pubUc files of the 1tatton.a,
monitortnc protrams and meetings with the 1la·
tJons, we coneludrd that industry aell·re1ulation, as
proposed by the .f.CC, lsn 't workina . .,
THE COMIUTTEE claimed t.oo many violent cartoons are shioWn on weekends and after school
instead of educational procrarns.
The stations named In the action were KN'XT
<Channel 2), KNBC <Channel ''· KABC CChanrtel 7), KCOP <Channel U), KT1V <Channel 11), KTLA
<Channel9).
COMMJTJ'EE spokeswoman Allee March said
hpr aroup didn't file a formal complaint because
·'we 're not Interested in goin& after Ucenses. We Just
want televtslon to move in newdirecUons to meet our
children's apecial needs. be sensitive to thelrspecial
"
Pl ~uJnerabiUtaes." . Pre-fHg t %%G However, KCOP program director Walt Baker
said his station has developed a dally pro1ram de· Gov. Jerry Brown partakes of pizza in siened to meet commiUee standards for children's New York pnor to flying to London today viewing.
to at t c n d memorial service at BAKER SAID "The Froozles," a live show us-
Westmlnster Cathedral Wednesday for the Ing puppets, people and marionettes to 1lve
DAILY PILOi:
from the cornmiU 1 ~eludln1 Ml. arct\, ·
preaaed d1Jappo10t.in~~ that the 1roup tia
mentioned the proaram b.' ill statement. t KABC staUon m na~t: r John Severino H · •
too, had-received committ6e approval tor "SUjjija-
Funday," n proaram teet'1rin• 1clentlllt •
menu and ac•ven.1~r hwat1. ·
• MS. MARCH told a press 601lterence the seven
stations were providln1 net""'>rk prorraml'Qln&
r11thet than local shows to Los .~.zcles chlldN".
and that the FCC ahould bold he~"'inp to evatuaM
Jocal programs and advertlaments ln an effort to
estabUshst.mndards. 1 ' •
StaUons not affiliated wlth a neh•·ork &eneraUy u1e Mtwork program• alttd a few Yf:•lrs aao. wd
Marilyn Solomon Qf KHJ·tV· 1
Liquor Trial Ended
PR~O (AP> -One Bi.kersfleld·a~·• man
ha• beeo convtct.ed ot con&'plracy to pe>1aesa • atolen
Jnterstate shJpment ot whiskey worth more than
$40,000, but another man bas been acquitted. .
A U.S. District Court jury deliberated c1ht
hour& bdore retami.r>I • Jui1ty vudict qaiUSt
Gradle MacPowell, 28, ot OUdale. He will be sen·
tenc'd ~. 12. ' llaymond Lee Detter, 22. Of Bakersfield wu ac-
qultted aft.er testifyln.,; that be was offered $50 by.
Michael Wllllam Rouw. 32, ot Bakenfleld to 1uud Betty Munson, a bank spokeswoman, said
Crocker was "very proud" of the settlement, but
she said the bank ant1c1pated "very few bonafide
claims" under the terms of the court's decree.
late Ernst Schumacher. academic and moral lessons, has received fan mall ~~~~~~-=::::.::::..==..::.:.:..:~..:.:.=..:.....:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ n truck·trailer parted In the Atvln area.
Tiii': AGREEMENT provides that each class
member can get free legal aid from attorneys to
help determine ir discrimination took place, Ms
Levine said
Ir the attorneys believe there is bias, then the
person involved can take the complaint to the court.
Sinatra
Files
THE BANK HAD about 11,000 employees in
1975 in its 361 branches in California and subsidiary
offices m New York. Chicago and overseas.
Lawsuit
Among Crocker's employees, nearly 66 percent
were women and 28.2 percent minoriUes. accord·
ing to Hgurc:. Crom the setUement.
Public to Decide
Offslwre Leasing
WASHINGTON CAP) -The Interior Depart·
ment sayb 1t as seeking ideas from lhe 011 industry·
and the public ror are:ts to be leased in 1981 off the
California coast for possible oll and gas develop·
ment
The department said Monday that the area un·
der consideration for auction Included more than
10. 7 million acres of the floor of the Pacific Ocean
on the outer continental shelf off Central and
Northern California
THE INVITATION begins a series of steps to
prepare for the possible awarcUng ol leases in the
area ranging from three to 70 males off the coast
north of Santa Barbu ra.
The department will consider the comments
and decide which tracts ment further study. It
must then prepare environmental impact studies.
with additional public comment.
TUEN, THE SECRETARY of the intenor can
make :.1 fimd decision on offering to lease tracts lo
petroleum companies for exploration and develop.
ment of oil and gas
Current Current Term
Annual Yield• Annual Rate
8.06% 7.75" 6-10 ear5
7.79% 7.50% 4-10 ears
6.98% 6:75% 21/z-10 ear1.
6.72% 6:509' 1-10 ear•
5.92% 5.75% 3month1
5.39% 5.25% None (Regular Acct.)
Sl.000
u.ooo
$1,000
Sl,000
$500
$5
• Yearly eamlnOi If 111r.r.1111 lclt In lt'COUl\I for""' y "' F'eJ~ral rraui.n11n1 '*qVIH . tub1Mhli ti 11'11 ...... lot·
fdure for orly wllhcifewillal umn ..:.:<iillltt lnw1.-1 I• cc.ms><•und.id da~v •r..J con1pu1.iJ 01•• 1<.0 J1vl>At•1
We wnt transfer funds from your sevlngs to
your checking account with a phone call. This
and other services have the eff ttct of eamlng
you 11n even gre11ter return on your money.
Come and tee u1 today. We're here to advlte
and hetp.
,
· fla~dicap,ped Need
!mprov,~d Transit
I .
As things have transpired so far Orange County's 'h~dicap~ rcsidf:nts have been given little but the pro-
mise of pubhc trarv;Portation in the form of Dial-a-Lift.
Orange Cour',ty Transit District <OCTD) directors
:Jnade Dial-a -Lif'1. a countywide service last August offer-
)ng the handi1.!apped a chance to phone for door-to-
e estination trrmsit on llit~equlpped minibuses for a 25-cent
/are.
But the service, operated through a contract with
Pa~amed Inc. of Santa Ana, bas been plagued with com-p~aa~ts. Tiley range from failure to keep appointments for
packrng up passengers, to discourteous treatment of the
handicapped, to mishandling of OCTD bus equipment.
As ·a result, directors last week decided to cancel the
contract and hire Yellow Cab of North Orange County as a
temp1Jrary replacement. For its serviceYellow Cab will
be.?'aid $14.97 per hour or about $29,940 a month for
21000 hours.
Directors were right to try to impro"ve Dial-a-Lift.
: They should profit by experience and build provisions into
: ~he n ext contract to make sure private firms can deliver
; he service they're being paid so handsomely for.
· An estimated 33,000 handicapped county residents are
" in need of this type of transit service. For $29,940 a
month they should be getting the courteous, efficient atten-
. tion of well trained operators .
~The lunch Debate •
President Carter doubtless thought he was on pretty
safe ground when he came out against what he called the
"three-martini lunch" which. he contends, finds busi-
nessmen writing $.50 lunch tabs off their taxes while "a
truck driver cannot •leduct his $1.50 sandwich."
T he president appart•ntly didn't reckon with the Na·
tional Res taurant Association whi~h bounced back with
some rhetoric and statistics of it~ own, citing the plight of
thousands of food sen ace worlrers who would be out in the
cold as a result of Carter's pr1Jposal to limit business meal
deductions to 50 percent of crJsl.
. Noting that 8 milhon A'mcricans hold full and part lime
Jobs m foo<l scnl('C md.1\stries, the NRA figured the cut
woul<l imperil about S13 billion of the industries' annual $94
billion income
The assocwt1on ~·.id its surveys show the average tab
for <JO expense a ct<~Jnt meal is $3.93 and.that the typical
lunch consists of u ·..s~ndwich, french fries and a salad.
Furthcrmorl', :-.ayi:. NRA, the cocktail is the least
popular busint1s~ htnt h bcvt•rage, ordered on only 3 percent
·of lunches. wttlJ coff cc, soft drinks, tea and milk all more
fa\"orcd.
The gap hl'twccn Carter's S50 lunch estimate and the
NRA 's $3.93 may indicate a little hyperbole on both sides.
But. a.··. columnist Charles McCabe notes on this page,
the wholt~ showy issue seems to be yet another example of
go\"crnr:rwnt 's passion for telling us how we should lead our
It ,-cs without fi rst doing the necessary homework.
Age of 'Modules'
. The "nuclear f~mily " -mom. pop and kids floatine
. abo~t the land mmus the comforting support of the
oldt1me array of uncles. aunts, cousins and grandparents
apparently was just the first step.
~ow. acc~rding to a sociologist specializing in family
stud1es._Amencans are on the way to becoming "separate
economic and psychological modules." These modules
we're _told, will spend only a brief part of their middle
years m family living, remaining alone or in "transitory"
arrangements for the rest of their lives.
This rather dcpr\!ssing forecast seems to be backed up
by stat!stlcs on the growth of single-person hou&eholds in
the Urut.ed States. The Census Bureau says 15.5 million
people now Uvi,ng alone account for 21 percent of all
households, an Increase of 43 percent in the past seven
years.
In the ho~lng industry the singles who buy 15 percent
of all homes sold in the country and more than halt the
townhouses and condominiums in cluster housing develop-me~ts are kno'Ml as SSWDs -single, separated, widowed
or divorced buyers.
. This tr~nd, says the Wall Street Journal, is having a noticeabl~_Jmpact on the economy. Singles favor smaller
cars. appuance manufacturers are turning out gadgets ~ swt~ble for one-perso~ households and the food industry is
looking more toward single-serving packages than the old
economy family sizes.
In other words, every effort is being made to assure
the physical comfort of the human "modules" of the future
-but we'd have some serious doubts .about . tboir
psycbo~ogical well-being.
l
. .
Opinions •><pressed In the space above are those of tht Delly fllot.
Other views expressed on thla page are those of their autnore and
artlata. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot~ P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92826,. Phone (714) 642·4a21.
By L.M. BOYD
The Father of Archeotoiy,
Heinrich Schliemann, di1-
c:onred the ruins or ancient
Troy. A.Del he, too, hu b1s
place tD our Love and War
man' me. Firucky fellow,
Jlelnrlc.h. Afttr his first mar· TlaCe meted, he decided to 1et
care.fut. Ho teeted his pro-1pectlve brtdea·tO·be wlth
W ASJUNGTON -The Jederil
government has dl1c:overed a
disturbing 100 dlac~paaoles ln
the nuclear bookkeeplna of so
prlvate eompanlee. Hundtecla of
pounds of nuclear materials,
1ultable for producing H·bombs.
are unaccounted for and,
therefore, may be mlaslnc.
Thll new1 comes at a time of
chllllni report• that nuclear
materiala
hav e been
stolen from
U .S. plants
a nd smuqled
to foreien
powers 1eek-
1ng to man·
ufacture
nucl ea r
weapons.
The Nu -
c l ear Reeulatory Com-
mission, whlch has been charged
with keeping track of the deadly
materials since 1975, prefers to
say the 700 cases are merely "ac·
counting dlfterences." But a
spokesman conceded that more
than 1,000 tons of H·bomb ingre-
dientH cannot be accounted tor.
In addition, the status of
thousands of pounds of less
dangerous uranium ls in ques-
tion. The bookkeeplna LS so mud·
dled that tome companies may
actually have )Dore material on
hand than lbe tecorda abow.
The d.lacrepancJes have been
found In t!\e nuclear inventories
of such major companies as
Westinghouse, General Electric.
General Atomic•, Babcock. and
Wilcox, N~lear Fuel Services
and Atomics International.
THE NUCLEAR regulators,
despairlni of solving lbe prob-
lem on their bwn, are callini in
outside contractors for help. '!be
contract bid calls for "ellmina\:.
ing any inconsistencies existing
between the two data banks." One data file is located In
Washin1ton, the other in Oak
Ridge, Tenn.
The commission admits the
companies may have provided
iood data to the 'overnment. In
at least some cases, the informa·
tlon wa1 cranked faultily into the
computer banks. In other ca.sea,
one set of facts was fed to one
!ederal computer and another set
to the other computer. To make It
even more cOllfusing, there were
instances in which no data at all
Earl Waters
•
was dflllvered to one of t.he two
federal bo0kkeeptn1 ay1tem1.
Footnote: l'he Natural
Resourcet1 Defen•~ CouncU ls
draftln1 a ma .. lve freedom of ln-
formttlon suit Jgalnst the aov-
ernment in an ertort to learn the
exact amount of ml sine nuclear
material.
McRAE'S NAVY -A former
Navy leaal officer has cha'rted In
a confidential report Lbal the
Navr 1y1tem1tlcally violates the
lega rlehta of youna, un1uspect·
Int recruit.I. •
The dl1turbln1 report, aub-
mitted by Ronald McR" to Rep.
Thomas Downey. 0 .-N.Y., al-
Ieie•: • 'Recndta with lea al prob-
lems ... were often ilven mis·
leading and inaccurate advice,
and often denied ri&ht of
counsel.''
The former leaal olflcer ex-
plained that Navy recruiters. if!..,
their zeal to sign up potential
recruits, have given them lnac·
curate advice. The new men
have been told not to worry about
any juvenile delinquency,
homosexuality or drug abuse
prior to their enllstments.
Baud on this erroneous.
counsel, some enli1tee1 haven't
bolhfred to list on recruitment
forms that they had once 1moked
pot. This has been u.aed a1alnst
them later, tn some cases to
bring their discharge for
fraudulent enlistment. Yet tho
recruiters. who misinformed
them h ve received only niild reprimands.
MaRae cit.el several cases to
document bis charce that
recruit.I are 1etUn1 unfair treat·
ment. He,; notes, tfor example
that on• l'k111it received a· preJ'.
udicinl .. general disehar1e" for
''homosexual tendenc s." Yet a
company commancter who
homosexually molested two
recruits, was aranted an honor•·
ble d lsc barge for "uo-
suitablUty."
IN ANOTHER example,
McRae reports that 16 recruit.a
signed a pelltion laat January
against their master-at-arms.
The superior omcer who was
supposed to investigate the com-
plaint didn't bother. Instead, ho
accused the petitioners of belnt
"mullnetrs," ordered them to
stand at altenUon ID the aun iirid
threatened them with a di•·
honorable clbcharse unlee theY
recanted. Suhl quently, Navy
lnveatlsatora dlicovered that the
matter·at-arrna and hls 111l1·
tan.ta, indood, h d "threatened,
kicked andusaulted recruits."
Footnote: Down•y · haJ
forwarded a copy or Mcl\ae'1 re·
port to Nav)' Secretary Graham
Claytor anU bu demanCled run
answers.
SENATE REPO T CA DS:
Freshmen senators just like
school ch11dien get report cards.
These ~ar..ts don't contain P855·
tn1 or falllnc erades But the ~nate quietly keep track or the
flrst·term senators who play an
active role In making laws.
By thl1 standard, ttie current
crop or 18f.reshmen senators lsn 't
impre11tlve. Only tour of them
manaaed to get any lealslation
through the Senate thl• year.
They aro Sens. Dennl1 DeCon·
cinl. D.-Arb .. H. John Helot Ill, R.Pu .. Spark Mat1unaga, .D.-
Hawalt, und S.t. Hayakawa, R.·.
Calif .
,, YOU HAVE NO IDEA ~"rr'S Ul<EiRYING TO REA.SON wrru IHOSE ARABS!11
The Great Shopping Cart InvestigatiOn
RecenUy a federal commission
reported ita findings on a two-
y ear study of the possible
hazards of supermarket shop-
ping carta! Unremarkably the
study found no perils existent to
the public health and safety in
connection wlth the carts. or at
least none sufficient to warrant
any 1ovemmental regulation of
their use.
"But," said one or the com·
missioners, "we ou1bt to do
something."
·The others,
apparently
reluctant to
completely
dissuade the
zeal of a
fellow
member ,
aareed to of· ficlally sug-
1ea t to all
grocers that the carts be postod
with warnina •llftl. Tpe skimpy
details provided:•by our source
did not relate 1 exactly wbat tile
slan should warn the public
about. Presumably lt would have
something to do with the prac·
lice of mothers joyriding small
chitdren in the baskets.
While it is appalling to learn
that there exists a federal com-
m lsslon with &o little to do that It
could spend even two hours on
such a study, Jet alone two years.
the attitude that one "ought lo do
someUUng" in the face of cle&l'
evidence that not the .sll1htast need exists, is even moredlstr ,.
ing.
AND, SADLY," all too many
aovernmeotal agencies have
been created. not only at the
federal but at the atatt and local
levels u well, for which there ts
no demonstrable neicl.
Too often they come'into beln1
t)ecauM some lawmaker, react·
ing to the clamor-of ome small
group, feela he "ou1ht to do
somethi.n(." Executlvea usually
don 'l reallt the creatlon of boarda
and commtUtons for the simple
reason it gives Uiom addltlonal
patronage. They can pay off
some supporters, appoln~lni
them to the new agency. This Is a
form of flattery which has proved
irresistible to even the most
rabid con se rvativeH who
otherwise decry too much gov·
ernment regulation.
Perhaps, aside from the un·
necessary expense of such use-
less agencies, no real harm
would be done if It stopped there.
But invariably, once a com-
misston is formed. its members
are imbued with the idea it
"ougbttodosomethins/' Erco. a
raft ot half· baked regul aUons.
U-N ORTUNATELY, tbls
same aense of a. muslon to ac·
complish pervades tbe
legislative halls. Having been
elected to office the solons seem
to think it necessary to author
new laws to prove they are doing
something. You can usually tell
the freshmen members simply
by noUng which members have
introduced the most bllls.
With the advent of the c:on·
Unuous, year·round two·)Ur
sessions, persistence hu become
the rule. Once a lawmak•r get.I a
notton for a new law lt ~ome.·
some klnd of a challenee ·to
secure its passage no matter how
idiotic hla prop()Sal may be.
Somehow It newer seems to dawn
upon tealslators that they might
be more appreciated if they spent
their tlme repe1Un1 • few ot ~
unaodly number or laws whlch
have bten inscribed upon th
books just during th past
quarter century.
I
B1 'fte M#elated Pfea . 'Tia the 1ea10D w hollday ataaosua appear
lQ tem~ COtUum rs .ttll vtsklfts of man ord r
uaerebaiactlM whlcb Md ug to • Q\WdblWa. dollar inda1try.
Altbeuth December 1s not the bt11eat month tor
· the mail order bustnea1 -January •ales are •ct'lal·
ly the lar1ett-lt does brtn• aQ lncreued number
of offerlnp ln mallboxn aM as aUl)S>lementa t.o
Sunday new.papen. ·
CONSUMERS PLANNING TO SHOP by man
should take precauUon1, however, t.o avoid di.up-
pointmenta. Mall order flnm cons.latently rank
blab on complalot liata. The federal Oflice of
Con.sumar Alfalra uys
that 8.1 percent of all ( J complaints received from C 0 NS UM ER_
February throueh _ ,
Decembe r 1978 con-
cerned mail orders. Only
automobiles drew more complaints.
Federal Trade Coouniaston regulations im·
· pJemented tut year impose strict atandarda for de-livery and it pays to~ aware of them.
Under the rules, a manufacturer who promis~.
in an ad or brochure, that your package will be
"rushed to you in a week" -Or two WffkS Or any
liven period-must ship lt witlµn that time.
• m
IF TIIE SEU.Ea DOES NOT promise delivery
by a certain date, you have the rltht to have it
shipped to you wit.bin 30 daya after)'our order ta r • ~elved. •
lf the merchandise '5 not ablpped -ei er by
the date speclfied or within UM aG-day llrillt -you
have the right to cancel your o~er. TM seller must
notify you of the delay and pro\lide • free meaDJ -
a postage-paid card, for example-tor you to reply.
You have two opUona in the cue of such a de·
lay. The first choice Jato cancel tbe order and eet
your money back -ln full The aeUer must mall
your reftmd to you wJthln seven bu.sbJesa days after
you cancel. II you charted the purcbue on a credit
card, the seller bu one bllllne cycle to adjust tbe account
' YOUR OTBEB CHOICE IS TO accept the de1'Y
and aifee to the new shlppf.ne date. If the delay la
less than 30 days and you do not reply one way or the
other, the seller haa the rt1bt CO auume you agre.
to the late shipment. If it la more than 30 days. you
have to give your expreaa con.sent to a delay. If you
do not reply, the merchant must automatically
cancel the order and refund your money.
The regulaUons do not apply to services like
mall order photo flnlshine. to magazine subscrip-·
lions, to mail order seeds and plants or to COD or-
ders. If you have a P!"._Oblem, you can write to Dlrec·
Who's Who 'Sex is Beautiful'
Hustler Changes Told In Hubby,
Wife Tiff?
DAYTON, Ohio <AP)
-Can a man be forced
to testify aeatnst his
spouse -if his spouse
also is a mao?
COLUMBUS1 -Ohio (AP) -the
born -again publis her of Hustler
magazine says the publication will
still ma.lee money despite his new re·
Jigious commitment.
That question will be
decided thl1 week by
Municipal Court Judge
W. Erwin Kilpatrick,
who is hearinC a case in·
volvingtwomenwho, ac·
cording to police reports,
had a domestic quarrel
in October.
THE PAlll have a
marriage certificate is-
sued in Florida, which
Kilpatrick says seems to
make them legally mar·
ried. But, the judge said.
.. I don't know which
one's the h~band and
which one's I.be wife.
A Florid a bill
apecifically outlawing
marrlace.a between
·members of th~ same
sex was slped iDto law
June 8, but wblle Jt was
belne "etJated in the
legislature state At·
-torney General .Robert
Sbevin said same·sex
marrla1es were already
illegal. '
"People who think I'm not gome to
make money with HusUer don't know
how far ore they are," said Larry
Flynt, 41, wbo repertedly made $20
milllon protit last year from Hustler
and Chic magazines and Leisure
Ti.IDe sex alds.
''WITll lltJS'ft.ER BEFORE, we
turned ~lot of people off," Flynt said.
..What we want to do now is tum
~y~ oo, rather than tum people off ~· ..•
flynt. who claims to have reached a ~red faith with the aid of Ruth
Carter Stapleton,
~ldent Carter's ~·•*: "I'rna ti I'm not re cio . It's
bef.,ween me and
the man upstairs. I'm not going to
join any oqanized
religion. ..
Flynt said
·Huatler's senally
explicit content.!!
are not going to be
Brown Names
2Trustees
To CSU Panel
SACRAMENTO CAP) -~bor
leader Michael Peevey and attorney
Blanche Bersch have been named by
Go'(. f!dmund Brown Jr. to the
California State Unl•ersit.y and
Colleges Board ofTrusteei.
The appointments are trqwn'a fifth
and sixth on1he 22-membe~g
board for the 19-eampus sy~m.
PEEVEY, 41, OF San Raf.el, is ft·
ecutlve direct~r of the California
Council for Environmental and
Economic Balance, a labor-industry
group.
tor, BurHu of Consumer Protection, MO-P, F~eral Trad ComauJ11lon. Waahlncton. D.C .• 20580.
THE DDECI' AIL MARKETING Asloci&·
tlon, wbleh repmentl 85 t.o 70 percent of the in·
dustry, allO trld to handle C01'1\lmtt complainta.
The asaoet1Uoo'1 1ddre11 ta: GE. 43fd St., New York, N.Y., 10017.
The auodatlon al10 offera a leaflet wltb
auid•lin for eonaumen on mall order ahopplna. I\
la avallablo at no char1e, but. you m~t send •
ttampod, aelf.addffued envelope with your re-quest.
THE. MAIL oanga BUSINESS alone ls a
'33·bl1Um·a-year induatry .. 'fbe total di!'ect uiarket·
ing bualness -including coupona and catalogues lJl
newspapere-added up to $1!5 bUUoo last year.
An u1ociation spokesman conceded that
Cbristmu probably ii not the beat Ume to try a
maif order house you have not u.1ed belore.
To mlnlmlie potehtlal troubles, llldustry •
spokesmen and 1ovemment ••enclea advtae COD· t.:,;~~"'""'!!'1919"!'_..:.;;~...-.--~....;~~~~~ sum en to follow a few basic ruJea:
-Shop around ju.t as you would with a reiutar
store. .Uk frlenda lf they bave used a particular
company. Check the Better Buslnes. Bureau. Find
out if the ftrm Is a member ot the Direct Mall
Marketing A.noclatlon. If you have Utne, try plac·
iog a small order and see what kind or service you get.
Officers
Elect«l
ON OCT. 4, police said
Barry Doney and his
s pouse, William E .
Merica, had a flght.
Doney reportedly bar-
ricaded him.self in their
apartment.
phased out immediately due to the
three-month lead time required for
publicatioo of the magazine. But he re·
fuaed to specify changes be bas in
mind, except that the cartoon
character "Chester the Molester,"
featured monthly, may be changed to
"Chester the Protector." Ms. Bersch, "3, a priva~ attorney p W' --& in Los Angeles, ls a forufer deputy ro~ LA.a•
Merica called police
who had to climb onto a
porch roof to get Into the
apartment. Then Doney
allegedly cut Dayton
police officer Mark
Davis on the finger wltb
a knlCe. He was charged
wit.h Celonioua assault,
resisting arrest and dis-
orderly conduct.
AT 11IE OCT. 19 trial,
Merica waa denied the
privilece of not mWying
against· hi• apouae.
Doney waa CObvicted of
the mltdemeanor
charges and bound over
to the Montgomery
County Grand Jury for
felonious assault of the
policeman.
. .
HE WAID THERE IS no dec1s1on
yet on whether to ban nude women
poses, but Hustler's philosophy is go
Ing to remain basically the same,
"We're going to be doing what
we've been doing, but we'll do it bet·
ter," be said. "Sex is beautiful and
Bids Sought
SACRAMENTO <AP)
-State Transportation
Director Adriana Gian-
tu rco announced the
at.ate ii calling for bids
on the first of four con-
tracts to close the gap in
t.he Slml Valley·Stn
Fernando Valley
freeway. '1'be first con·
tract will be to realign
part of Rlnaldi street and
conatruct brld1es at
1everal cities 1treetl.
state attorney general. LOS ANGELES <AP)
BOTH APPOINTEES are -More than half a
Dt>mocra ts and succeed trustees million dollars worth of
whose terms expired. Los An1elea County's
Th<' jobs n~ed Senate confirmation equipment hu been lost
and have no salary ex.cept reimburse-and unaccounted for dur-
mcnl for expenses ing tbe past three yean,
· officlala aay.
/
8 DAil Y PILOT T UMCSay, Novetnbor 29, 1877
.. .
Utility Trulnl'l'nce'!
&tate Pendulum Gets .
Reduced Ready to'Swing
SAN DIEGO (AP) A
report before a public
bearing today recom·
mends that San Diego yu and Electric Com·
t>ariy be allowed to own
33 percen\, not 50 per·
cent. of the proposed
Sundesert nuclear plant.
ByTHOMASD. EUAS
Every eight years or 10, 1oes the truism,
Callfornl~'s political pendulum swln11 from the
right lo the left, from RepubUcan to Democrat. ln
another eight years, the same platllute ar1ues, the
pendulum will shift back again.
As California heads into the 19'18 election year,
that cycle appears to be holding up·
The report, submitted by California Energy THE DEMOCRATS TODAY ARE In almost the
Com mission chairman same position slate Republicans enjoyed ln 1970.
Richard Maullin and In that year , the popular Republican governor
m e m b e r E m I I i 0 was Ronald Reagan. able easily to wl\Mtand the
Varanini, also recom-free-swinging campaign thrown against him by
mt!nds San Diego Gas Democrat J esse Unruh. a qualified candidate In bis
make up for its reduced , own right.
participation by seeking SOUTHERN ln 1978, the popular
a p p r o v a 1 o f 8 n CALIFORNIA Democratic governor will
alte rnative non-nuclear } .. OCUS be Edmund G. Brown Jr.,
p0wer plant before Sun· whose showing in the ear·
desert is certified. ly polls indlcates he can
A vote on the report is easily withstand the onslaughts or capable and solid
scheduled by the com-Republicans like EveUe J . Younger, E<l Davis, Pete
mission for Dec. 21. Wilson or Ken Maddy.
SAN DIEGO (AP
School lawyers were or-
dered buck to the draw·
ing bonrds today and told
lo produce 1l workable
pupil desegregation plan
by Ap ril 24.
Superior Court Judge
Louis M. Welsh, who pre·
I
AT THE SAME TIME, MOST of the
Democratic statewide officers elected with Brown
in 1974 seem solidly entrenched. The Republicans
serving with Reagan enjoyed the same status In
1970.
Entering that election year, there was one
Democratic statewide official -the attorney
general, Tom Lynch. Now this ls one Republican,
Younger. also the attorney general
Just as Lynch cleared the way for Younger by
decllning to run in 1970, now it's Younger who Is
(
crr~TE ). clearing out, with at least four promising
J.l/I Democrats angling for his office.
Whether the Democratic candidate is Los
s-...id_e_d_a_t_a-de_s_e_g-rc_g_a-tiJon Angeles City Atty. Burt Pines, San Francisco Dis·
trial last spring, tr1ct Atty. Jose ph Freitas, Los Angeles
t nticiw<l th<' San Diego Congresswoman Yvonne Braithwaite Burke or Bay
plan as vague Area assemblyman Ah~ter McAlsiter, theDemocral
'"Som<.'<>nC will scream will be a solid favorite next November
either ~ay but, sooner or ember.
WASHINGTON CAP.)'
-U.S. DJstrlet Juctae
Frank M Johnaon
withdrew u Pre1ld1nt
Corter's nominee tor
FBI director because of
hia slow recovery from
1ur1ery, Attorney
General Griffin Bell an.
nounced today.
Bell said be will "let
the dust settle" for two .,. wi,..... weeks before decldrnc
,,...,~ Nertla how to go about chocmln.1
Film ·maker Stanley lbe administration •a next nominee to aocceed Kramer has bought
a $500,000 home near ( ) Seattle, saying, "Tbe IN SHOR~
Beverly Hills syn-· drome finally got to Clarence M. Kelley and me." He said he become the third FBI
wants his daughters, director-in the agency's history. 10 and 7, to attend a "I think It would be a
school "That isn't so wise course not to rush,"
tied up with the en-Bell told a news con-
t c r la i n men t i n . ference.
dus try." The attorney general
----------indicated that he would
Clemente
Explorers
Sought
Crjme scene and miss-
ing persons searches and
trowd control will be
amona the duties ofteen-
a~ers who enroll in the
San Clemente Police Ex·
plorer Post that is ac-
ask Kelley t.o stay paat
his scheduled retirement.
dale of Jan. 1.
Ocd• DotdJted
SALISBURY.
Rhodesia CAP) -
Mod e rate black na-
tionalists say the guer·
rilla armies fightln1 the
wh ite Rhodesian govern-
ment suffered a crlppl·
ina blow If the govern·
ment suffered a crlp·
piing blow If the govern·
rillas in Mozambique 11
correct I at er . the gauntlet has
got to be thrown down,"
Welsh .,aid in ordering
changl'S in the plan sub·
milled with amendments
July 20
AND JUST AS BROWN ENTERED statewide
politics in 1970 by running for secretary of state, • cepting appli cations. The blacks inside
Rhodesia, whose leaders
are preparing to open
talks with Prime
M mister Ian Smith on a
transition to black rule,
appeared to put little or
no credence ln Mozam·
bique's claim that aobut
80 people were killed In
the five-day Rhodesian
air and ground attack de-
ep inside Mozambique
last week.
Elt~t l'letDed
LOS ANGELES CAP )
Officials of the
Lockheed Co. and the
striking lnlernulional
J\ssol'iat1on of
1\lal•hiru!'ls art• working
fcn~ri!'ihh to make the
bl•Sl of a ·dt•c1s1on by dis-
s 1 dent strike rs in
Northern Cal1forn1a to
return to work despite
objections b) the union ·s
national headquarters.
Rut one Lockheed of·
f1cial noted, "It 'II prob·
ably be several days
before we really know
~ .. hat effect it will have "
RainE~ct~d
By The Assoc:lated Press
Sprinkles and drizzles
were ex p ected to
dampen parts or the
state's northern half to-
day as a small cold front
-.Ji ps over the regton.
The greatest chance
for substantial showers
was in lhc northeast cor-
ner of the state, the
weather ser vice said.
The Sierra snow level
was set at 6,500 feet.
today's most promising young
Republican pros pect is also
seeking statewide office in 1978.
This time the prospect Is Mike
Curb, a record producer who
wants to be lieutenant governor.
Curb's expected run makes.
the present lieutenant governor,
Mervyn M. Dymally, the least
secure of the Democratic lncum·
bents. For Dymally's integrity
has been questioned repeatedly cuH
in the media, making re-election not at all certain.
even lf the opposition weren't as well -financed as
Curb will be.
Should Curb win. he can be expected lo make
the lieutenant governor's chair a step toward a run
al the governor's offi ce In 1982. Brown made similar
use of his Job as ~ecretary of state.
OF mE OTHER THREE DEMOCRATS tn
statewide office, only Controller Ken Cory can ex·
peel seriou5 opposition. No major candidates have
expressed interest in running against either
Secretary of State March Fong Eu or Treasurer
Unruh.
Bul Dixon Arnett. another Bay Area as·
semblyman, has said he wants to take on Cory,
whose past links to Orange County Democratic
wheeler-dealer Louis Cella could be used against
him.
Still, Arnett is so liUle known outside the Bay
Area that even with Cella as a dl!!trlct liah1hty,
Cory should have little difficulty next year.
Thal would leave the stale with almost the ex
act opposite political makeup it had after the 1970
election.
The Explorer training
1s designed to prepare
members for law en·
forcement or related.
careers. a spokesman
said, but also provides a
good understanding for
responsible citizens of
how n city police depart-
ment operates.
Anyone 14-19, who is at
leusl 9th &rade and has a
2.0 cumulative grade
average or better for
high school cir college
courses may apply at the
San Clemt•nte Police
Department, 100 Ave.
Pres1d1 0, Monday
through Fnday. from 8
a m toSp.m.
Additional information
is available ~Y calling
492 5101.
'
Outloolc Balled
MbnleFlred
LOS ANGELES (AP)
A low -altitude
supersonic missile has
been successfully
launched for the first
time rrom an Air Force
B·l prototype bomber
according to Rockwell
International Corp.
THEN, BROWN WAS THE ONJ.V Orml)c•rat
left in statewide office, while Reagan ~ a1ted and
hoped for a Republican president to faltc•r
After next year, there will probably be either '
one Republican or none in statewide office, while
Brown waits and hopes for a Democratic president
The company an·
nounced Monday that the
short·range attack mis·
sile was fired over the
Air Force Paclrlc Missile
Test Range off the coast
of Southern Calitornla
this month.
Ea•erri RolllN!d
NORTHRIDGE (AP)
-A motorcycle·ridlng
man robbed a Marle
Callender's restaurant of
$9.926 -without 1ettln&
off his two-wheeled vehi·
cle, Loe Angel~s police
said today.
Officers said the man
rode into the rear en·
trance ot the restaurant
Monday just u a woman
employee was leav!n1
for the bank, arabbed the C•f!V!'I bait and rode off.
SUl'r.NEJS
$111,000
to falter.
But the 1982 elections, like those of 1974, will
bring major changes in lhls status quo, al'\d by 1986,
lt 's possible the Republicans who are back in a com-
manding position in California-(or a while.
ANALYSIS I CAREERS I PEOPL6
From Al' Dtriik Let'• bear ltforAltLH~
Sen. Albert Dole or Kansas wa. one ot aeveral ·
pN11dentlal hopefuls at the SoutM.m Republican
Conf orence. Former Gova. Roa1l4 &ea1aa of
California and .IObD 8. Coually or T•iaa and Sen.
Howard IL Baktr of TeMessee also were there.
Dole was asked about the ar~win1 llat of
Republicans showing an interest lo cballentlnl
Pre1ldntCarterln 1980.
"Alf Landon is .k>okin1 ai It and there ruay be
others," be aaid.
Landon, who recently turned 90, Is the former
Kansas aovemor: who was the Republican can·
didate for president in 1936. He carried Malne and
Vermont.
• Gov. David Boren and former Oklahoma
Special District Judg~ Molly 8" of Ada began a
week-Jong honeymoon after a
private wedding at the gov-
ernor's mansion.
The new fir.it lady, who Is 34,
had been dating the governor for
several cnonths. She resigned
her judgeship Friday.
It was the second marriage
for both. Boren, 36. dlvor ed in
1975 after eight years of mar·
riage, has two children by his
fl rat wife, Janaa, who remarried
last year and lives ln Texas. • Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, D·Wuh., ia In line
to become chairman of the Senate Appropriations
Com miltee, succeeding Sen. 1
Jolin McClellan, D-Ark., who
died Monday.
To take over that post,
Magnuson would have to give up
the chairmanship of the Senate
Commerce Committee.
Magnuson has been chairman of
the commerce panel 22 years.
Sen. Howard W. Cinnob, D-
Nev., now chairman of the ...
Senate Rules Committee, ls ln w.~uM*
line to succeed Ma&nu~ as chairman ot the Com·
merce Commlttee, If Magnuson moves over to the
l\pproprial ons Committee. •
Some North Carolina Republican leaders are
dreaming of enlisting golfer Arnold Palmer as their
candidate for eovernor In 1980.
The possible overtures to Palmer, who is build·
Ing a home in the Charlotte 1rea, were revealed by
Phil Kirk, a former atate
legislator who served as human
resources secreta~y under
Republican Gov . Jim
lfolsbouser, during a visit to
Pfeiffer College for a speech on
the college's issue forum series.
"We assume Gov. Jim Rot,
• a Democrat, will most likely be
the Democratic candidate,"
Kirk told Interviewers. "There
PA H are a number or Republlcana
who believe Arnold Palmer w<>uld make a moat
form ldable opponentand could win ." ..
Tho Duke and Ducbesl of Gloaceater an·
PlJBUC NOl'ICE
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
'ICTITIOUS allSIN"K5'
HAMa UAU.Mlfll
l M foll ... lng 119rlolll It llO!ng llll•f. '"'•' ., ,.V 1 RlU.. • MSOCIAU.5, Suitt
20JA, J4ot lnlnt bl~d .. hewpott
11 .. u1,C.A v.llUam ,.....,...,.111,.11, ttee2 C..llt
All_.., Ml~ Vlffo, CA tZ.7'
1 hb Dlftliltt• I• c.ondl;(ltO by •II lit<
o!Vlouel. V.IHl41mA. F-.11i.U
l nh ,._,_," -111.0 .. 1111 the
County C.1"'1<0I Oran<Jt~Y INI ~· .... -1 • .,,,,
• 1114t7l Put>lllllH Or~ Goell Oel.., ,.,._ .. .... •~. n, n, OK.•·,.,, ..z.n
nounced the name or tbelr new baby, a 7·pound, .__ _____ _... __ _
ll·obncedau,hter born Nov.19. P\TBUC Ncn'ICE
Stie Will be called Davtaa EU1abetb A.Hee
Benedikt. Windsor, and takes· the title Lady
Windsor.
Davina, 11th ln line of succession to the British
throne, was the second royal baby bom wlthln a
week at London'• St. Mary'• Hospital. Prtnce11
Anoe aave birth to a baby boy there Nov. lS. • Travelers beaded to Mexico should load up on
portatilo-,.:Va, car etereos and cassette t•pes to sell
south of the border, be ready to
bribe border suards, and refrain
from smoking dope in public,
sayt Abbie lfoltma._ a tuaiU\le
a Ince 1914 00 federal drug aellli\J
ch•r1es.
Hortman made the com·
I
I
~
I
' I
!
ORANGE COUNTY I POLITlCS/ AT YOUR SERVICE DAILY PILOT ,. •
TftM!la Pla•t•
DEAR PAT: Is there any way to
keep bouaeplants ollve for a couple or
weeks without water? We plan to take
a vacntton during the Christmas
hoUdays, and I don't know of anyone
who could take care or my plants dur·
jng our ab6ence.
BY .• Newport Beach
Experts advise waterlng the pluta
on the day you leave, then covertDg
&hem with a polyethylene sheet aod
iealing Jt. Tbls will prevent molature
loss. In the meantime, train your
pJan&1 to get alone wllbotll their reg·
ular amou.ot of water. Over a ~
week period before you leave, slowly
reduce the amount of water med and
lengthen tbe time between waterings.
Medical Rundo1Dn
DEAR PAT· Where can I get a run·
down on the elig1b11ity requirements.
benefits and differences between
Medicare and Medi "Cal?
P.O., Santa Ana Hgts.
. Request a Medl·Cal/Medicare fact
sheet from the Department of Aging,
918 J St., Sacramento, Calif. 95814.
Prepared by the Senior Citizens Pro-
·gram of California Rural Legal As·
slstante, this material contains all the
information you want.
Shop Leave• Toten
DEAR PAT· I am trylog to locate a
specially shop m Orange County that
features merchandise made for left.
handed people Can you tell me where
it 1s?
R P .• Huntington Beach
Left·llanded Complement used to
be located In Santa Ana, but bas
moved to Los Angeles. Catalogs c:a.n
be rf'quuted by phoning <213>
476·Z462, or by writing to: 11359 Bolas
St., Los Angeles, CA 90049. You also
can order a catalog from The Left
Hand, Inc .. 110 W. 22nd St., New York,
N. Y. 10011. This catalog co'ts SI. but a
$1 certificate applicable to the first
purchasecumes with it.
GOllW of Cha1u~e?
DEAR PAT. How can you tell a
legitimale conlc!>t from an Illegal lot·
tery? I'm talking about contests one
.
CC'f 11 ,,.~· rw .. ..,,,,, '" l'nl t>w..11 l'ot 1n11 '"' •nl"""' ll'IO!sj/ ,,., .......... " ~ floMi ....
I• tolllt' llllflll'illi'• • ,_,,,._ ultd ~ Meil
~'*' 41••"'""" 111 Pol°"""· Al Y ... r .~~.Qr_,., ru.ur fliojl11 l'al,.c I' II IJoi U• Cotl4 MIH CA
~lt1• Al flkl'lll ltll•" IU ~11/IU "all ~ D.....,_rtd,
ti.&1 ~ ~nl• or Wllfr• l!Cll lllC~ l/tf
•ffld•r·1 flJJ •-.odfr•H CIM ...,..lllU •r•' plllM l\umti.rconlll.lt~ton..llkrwd. T...,co1.....,..,_.,,...,
lynrrpl~M~ ·
Yo:unger: 'Co111·ts lrlsblated' l
receives ill the mall that req~ ~tg
fees.
B.T .• Fountain Valley
There 11 a fine llne be&weea Jecat
cootetta and lottertet, wbJe•, ••cept for state-operated ones, are problbh-
ed by law from bela1 condaded
tbroucll the mail1. To be a loUefJ, a
1cllteme mast Involve aa entry fee, an
element of chance and prtaet. C.O.·
test.a that tnvolve eome de1ree ol lklll
are not considered lotterte .. accord·
tnc t-0 poKa.l au&borlUes.
Conteata with ..urY fees uaully
beliD by aeadlDi eontff& tonne &o
namet on a random mallla& u.t. Tbe
first conteat 11 very 1lmple. and
partlclputa are informed tlaat to.
eater, they need only cbooae wlaJch
prue category they want and MDII ln
the specified amonnt. Entry feea
usually range from $3 to $11, depeod-ASKS FIXED TERMS
Ing on how large a prtze may be , Atty. Gen. Younger
awarded. Feet are forfeited wbea a ----------
contest Is lost. Contests &et pro·
gresslvely more difficult and usually
involve aboutfourtle·breaken.
Although contests may end LIP cost·
ing parttclpanta 1ub1taatlal amoants
or money wiUl UUle retuna, tbe Poltal
Service repona U haa not received
any serious accualloo1.
One way to cheek out a contest la to
request names and addreaaea of pre·
vlous winners. Failure of a c:ompanr.
to send thla Information would be au ·
flelemt reason to be wary.
Red Tape Cut
DEAR PAT: I ordered a knifeset in
early May from PresUee Gifts alter
seeing an advertisement In Carte
Blanche magazine. 1 rffeived con-
firmation or my order June 28 ancithe
billing appeared on my September
Carte Blanche statement, but I still
haven't received the knives. I did
change my address in August, but in·
formed Carte Blanche.
B.C., Newport Beach
Fund Drive
Nears Goal
With Just three more
weeks to 10 before the of·
licial close of its 1977
campaign, United Way
of Orange County
North /South bu raised
$3,758,028 toward its foal
of $5 mlllion.
General Campaign
Chairman Robert W.
Clifford, president of Air
California, said the in·
terim fi"1J'e exceeds by
$33,188 the final result of
last year's campaign.
Contributions to Unit·
ed Way help s upport
educ ational. health,
counseJin1 and com-
m unity service pro·
grams conducted by 77
81 O.C. llUSTINGS Oftlllo.Hy ..... ._
Cbarctn1 that the U.S. Supreme Court and
federal appellate courts are "Insulated and l1o11ted
from Ole real world," atate Attorney General Evolle J . Yowiier la ureln1 fixed terms for federal
JusUcea.
Younaer told th~ Anaheim Rotary Club Monday
that Ult naUOI\'• court 1y1tem ls not worldnt·
properly because the courta are too preoccopled with
prodeoural matters.
He auuoa~ that 1>ne way to figbt the lsolaUon
WO\lld be a con1t1tuUonal amendment Umltln•
justices and Jwtaes to terms of 16 years, with the
posaibWt,y of a seco11d term throu&h reconfirm•·
Uon.
AND HE SUGGESTED llve televiaion covera1e
to foster interest and support !or reform 1n lower
courts.
''I don't 1uppoae a courtroom would bold over a
100 people, and not many can ao down and sit
lhrouab a trial and analyui what'• uppenina. But,
a lot of people could see that on televlaion," be aaid.
Citing the opposition of bench and bar to 1uch
coverage, he said some claim lt would be diaruptive
and that participant.a ••would ham it up and be more
concerned with their appearance than the work at
hand."
YOUNGER SAID TELEVISION cameras could
be mounted behind the rear wall of the ~ourt and
view the proceedings tbroup oblervauon boles
wrthout caU5(nt lnterfertnct.
"Televi1ln& court trials ls &Dint to happen
some day," the attorney general said. "I would Just
like to see it happen soon, so more people can know
what goes on in order to generate more interest and
preasure for reform."
*** .JOHN WILLIAMS, state auditor ceneral, will
address the annoal convention of the Oran1e Coun·
ly Republican Women, Federated Thursday in
Buena Park.
And Republican Congressman Robert Badham
is elated to do the honors when Mra. PbUllp Man·
ning of Laguna Hil1I ia in.stalled as the new p.resl·
dent or the county GOP women'• IJ'OUp.
Mn. Beverly Murchison of Colla Mesa la the
group'1newlreuurer. *.... .
REP. BADBAM has tapped Newport·.Mesa
school chief John Nicoll aa chairman ot the 40th
Con1resalooal Diltrict'a Mlllt.ary Academy Rnlew
Board.
Transit Hopefuls
Prestige Gifts, an arnllate of Carte
Blanche, sends its orders to various
manufacturers for processing. Carte
Blanche says you must write a letter
to Us Los Angeles orrlce uyln1 that
you did not receive the knife aet. The •
manufacturer then wlU be contacted
for processlng "within a week." U you
prefer, 1l full refund will be luued. Five .Cormty Names Sent to Govenwr
J;~e:;ic.-
The board wlll actYUe B1dbam on th• nomtna·
. Uoo of YoUnl men ancl women to th• natJon'
11rvtco•cademl •· Dr. Nicoll will head an exeeuth·• commi
composed of retired Alr Foree ceneril Cui'tla
LeMa1 ~Newport Beach, M.t. Oen. Carl W. Hott·
man, commandinc 1eneral of UMt Marin• Con>J
base at Camp Pendleton, and Oceanside Mayot PtiU
O. Graham, a retired Manno Corps teneral "'bO
commanded Camp PeDdleton ~fore 1\11 retlr~,
ment. ~· **'* BADIL\M PARBO poorly ln a recent r1Un1 Pf_1 conireurnen by Publlc ClU"'1, a Ralph Nad1 ,;>_
affiliated sn>UP which aaya it ts pro.comumer. "" So did b11 fellow RepubUcan, Charles Wl1Jlna
of Fullerton. How•ver, Oran1e County'• two
Democrata ln the Houle of Repn11entaUvea. JeffY
PaUeraoo ot Santa Ana and Mark Hannaford, who
represents watem portions ol the county, did bet•
ter.
Badbam wu rated at l~; Wlblna at 18. Pak
tenon acored '1J and Hannaford IO. .
The ratings are based on 40 roll calll Oft such ls·
sues as consumer protectlon, oil arid ea.s policy,
atomic power, tu reviston, ecol()fly, 1overnment
s ubsidies and 1ovemment reforms.
For instance, a ratln1 of IO percent means the
member voted with the aroup's own vlewa on 30 of
the (0 votes.
UCI F orurn Slated. " ..
On DNA. Research
The controvert)' aurroundlnt the huards of~
combinant DNA reaeareh -the manlpulatlon or
cenes -will be explored ln two 1tudent·spooaored
event.a at UCI Dec. 6 and 7.
Takina part lnt be dlleussion wnl be Ted
Howard, co-author of a new boot on DNA
tecbnolQIY; Assemblyman Dennls Manters, D·
HunUnpon Beach, co-author ol a Callfomla As·
sembly bill on the reaulatloa of DNA research. and
Dr. Davtd T. KJnfsbury and Dr. DA vid C. Tiemefet'.
DNA experts on the UCI faculty.
Author Ted Howard will speak on "Who Should
Play God?" Dec. 6, at 8 p.m. ln Crawford Hall.
Ticket.a are t;a.50 for aeneral admlulon and $2 for
UCI students.
"Is Anybody Playlnf God?" wlll be the topic of
a panel discussion by Assemblyman Manaen and
Dr. Kingsbury and Dr. Tiemeier Dec. 7, at 7 p.m. in
the Fine Ana Village Theatre. Ticket.a are $2 for
general admUialon adn $1 forUCI students.
Both events are apon1ored by the A.asociated
Students and the Social Ecolo8)' Center.
Deatlt Not 1..-es Death Notice• For lhe It Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is look· -TONY DIGIOVANNI, a San Pm-enthood. Class
ing for an Orange County resident to Clemente city councllman and board
LA II COM
MILDllED KATHE.HINE. LAHlOM,
re .. oent ol lu>Un. C.. P•u.O .... ,on
"oomber ll, 1911 •I ltw -01 ., h1,,.u1 MNkft wlll be twlo on ,.,.,. a.v NO•tmller 19, 1911., 10 00 A.M •I
!>mlln T u1n111 L•mo :.enu An•
Mort.,.ry woll\ Dr OoNIO !>twrgeon of
lrvane. CA ottKt•llnie l"t•rn"Htnt ••II
be •I lnQ,._ P•rk <.emelery on
tncittwOOO, C.. !>mllh l u1n111 L•rno
S•ttt• Ana Mor1u•ry 01rettor,.
>41-4131.
PAC:IPIC YllW
MIMOllAL PAH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3600 Pacific View Drive
Newport,
·c.11torn11
844-2700
W.COIMICIC
MOlrTU.UllS l.aguna S.l<lh
494-9415 taguna Hiiia
788-0933 ·San Juan C.platratlO .. 0~1ne ._.. ;
Record
· Du•olldlotu
01 Marriage
,llM...__1,
EHLER!>, Bet:ot L. end Terry C..
AGUAYO, Judith A. and HOQOr L,
PICARELLA, l eretote Anll• •nd
Jeck AnUIOny. GEl!>T, Su .. n !> -J ellre., G., BUSKIRK, Donne
Su1enne eno R-r1 MC>rrtl, REC
TOR, St•pnen 0 •no N•n<Y p •
WILLIAMS, Lind• "'"" •nO Peul
Robert, RIUING. Jowph Mi<""•l •nd
~nuoo "'""'"· Pll:R!.ON, K•lnryn ~ .no Utnn11 ~IOYO. MAl(Sk,
l hOOT4~\ lJ •nO Lonl J
Hu I ~MAN. Ch'r ,, A and R••Pfl
l , 110110). HoM•nn •nd Ml<.,..I J ••
WHI 1 l. ~·on M<iro~ •no <>-••Id
lO. I Ut.Al, MICh••• Louil and
Moyoko, l;MlRSON, JUdllh L. •no
v•<Y A . MARTIN. Uw•M<t J. -~OwdrO LN. EMRY, Shlrler M. ""° t;ry"n J. ~AlJLKNtR, Lom•n
tUQ•n• <Ind J•n•I L ... BISHOP.
lir•no• •no J-R .• BINDOfEH,
1.0ne L ~nd Eugene L.
~Mt HNOH', Yrry L. -.Joy L,
TOL[;R, llomrt A -Cieri<• D;
I; PP, Ari,..,, Albert -.X..M<t AM,
WELLS, 0.vlO 0. and N•nnette,
BALES, Susan R -ROOMY A.; ADAMS, Mlhfflne end J...,.I E.,
C.ALLACHER, John G. -Oetw• L.,
l HDMPSOH, Otlwe II. -'ermt D .• Sl:EGlR, WllllMn OlerlH and
0.nlM L•. $1MM()fj$, Coll"" $.
-RIUeyS.
OAW!.ON, OeMid C. Mel IMry L.;
appoint to the California Transporta· chairman of the Bank of San
tion Commission, there's a package of Clemente.
five names en route to Sacramento for -Mary· Evelyn Bryden, manaaer
hJm. of public relatiom for OCTD, aformer
Members or the Orange County Fullerton planning comn:ilsaloner and
Tl'aDJportation Commission agreed former executive assistant to county
Monday to aend the five names along Supervisor Ralph Clark.
for the (Ovemor's comideration. -Frances Wood, FUllerton city
councilwoman and a member of t.be
executive committee of tile Soutbem
California Association Governments.
THE UST WAS DRAWN UP by
members of the commission's cltizeb·
advisory panel.
The commission hu contended that
Orange County road projett.s receive
too i. mall a share or California
highway dollars.
The Orange County chapter of the American
Red Crou is offerine a course In preparlnc fol'
parenthood on three conaecut..lve Tbunday1, '7 to 9
p.m., beglnning thiJ Thursday at the Red Cross
West County Service Center. Westalnster.
The course, to be tau1tit by rqiatered none
Pat Sterling, will covet' nutrition, delivery, and
care for the newborn. There ls • • fee pet-couple.
To realater, or for further lnfonnatlon, call Ule O.C.
chapter Bed Cross Nurstna and HeaUh Protrams at 835~
••
They suggested the situation might
improve iC a local resident served oo
the slate Transportation Commisslon
which 1s resPonalble for CalTrans
sp<.•nding Pal' Yau11 Canv•nl•nc• W• llPll
Tiit: NOMINATIONS8BIPP8Doff
lo Sacramento Monday include:
Doreen Marshall, foriner
Newport Beach mayor and 1971
Orange County Grand Jury foreman.
Dr. G.J. "Pele" Fieldin&otSouth
Laguna, former Oranae County
Transit District (OCTD) general
manager, now a UC Irvine professor.
DN
LANDON, Ver91 May •n4 Artl\vf' .----------------------! O.lmu1; 5LATTO!f, 9111Y a. MCI
84<ky AM; llAIU. ..,._,.A. -0.nntJ II.; ZAMaORY, ,,_.... .... V.
end Mkl\MI, M&AKIN, OelMrtft Niii
-Ovene ~I Tfta\'INO,
Enrlqwte and Jwn; IOiaueaR,
lllOmH J ..... v.....-I..; HOLTZ.
W•l18r N. -,._, J.; llSfiOIJ,
.i.11-.y J. end P...WM.
JONIS, Arlene •Ml W ... r_;
COOMES, Jemee &.. .,.-~ A.;
SIJNUltl, Nllllll -,MkMll JeMt
ANOIRSON, VMtrtel(; Ml~ 0,f
CALDWELL, O•H ,, .. ,., IN
RW.rt AllMnlliwf ~IUt•, .......
J . enc1. a.-tt MMI..,, ,uoo•,
01•11• J"1111• tllO J•"'9t a1r11 fQf\lH, Ooretll'r alll QltrlHJ uao, H111TYMec&_.._.L~1 li\'ANl,-*"Mn .... D-.141*uCit.
Weekd•Y Moure:
Mond•• • irhund•r 8·4
l'rld•Y 9·8 .
(
..
l
I
\
I
WASHINGTON (AP)-Peoplehavlng
trouble falllnC aaleep shouldn't
automatically reach for the bottle of
1teef m& pills. It can be danaerou.s and
fata , wama the director or the National
lnatituteof Drue Abuff.
Sleepln1 pills contributed to the deaths
or nearly S,000 Americana 1 .. t year, said
the lnstitute's director, Dr. Robert L.
DuPont.
"PEOPLE DON'T HAVE to turn riibt
to lbe pill when they have trouble sleep·
ing. '' DuPont said in an lntervfew.
"They ought to know that some sleep·
lessness is a part or u ving. '.
"P~e abould be a lot less amdoul
abOut a few houri of .ml.a eel st~.•,• ho
said. •"Jbe body bu a way for maJdnl up
for lt. There'• no Med to cet ~t. ..
DUPONT SAID RE 18 1u11eatl1'11
educational pro1ram1 to better inform
4octors and the pubUc of ttie ctanaen of
sleepinc pills and atternaUve waye to
fall asleep.
Public awareness already may be
spreading, ~. because the number
of deaths linked to sleepln1 pllla bu
decllned since 1971.
••Both doctors and patienta are bel.ni
more conservative ln their me," he aald.
Most deaths related to aleept.na pllls
resulted from o•erdo -either ac·
cidentaJ or 1.ntenUonal -or floom use In
fatal comblnatloos with alcohol or other
dna11, he aaid.
Tho esUmate or the number of de•ths
UDJ(ect to =nf pills was baaed on a aurvey ol cal examiners ln 3C cit.la, ·heailld.
Heroin Tenm
\
Hal Linden, known to
TV fans as "Barney
Miller," has checked
into Community
General Hospital in
New York suffering
from viral bronchitis
and exhaustion.
Ironically, some people have trouble
sleeping because they worry about betne
able to gel to sleep, DuPont said. Ot.her;s
surrer from poor sleeping patterns
brought on by Uite working hours or un·
usual bedtimes.
DUPj)NT ADDED THAT the drug
abuse institute also is studyinl tbe
leaseninl errecuvenesa of aleeplnl pills
in people who use them frequently and
the danger when users tum to tarter
doses.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Jut two
or six meo convicted or conspiring to sell
12~ poundi of heroin have been sen·
tenced in Los Angeles federal court.
U.S. Dlatrtct Judge Robert Firth on
Monday aet)~ced George Mejia, 29, to
five years to prison, and Javier Lopes
Gomes. 28, to rour years. Both are Mex-"But, I'm not too sick to watch television. I'm
ican natlOQats. just too sick to go to school!" ·
Family
Slayer
To Hang?
VADUZ, Liechtenstein
CAP) -A Liechtenstein
court hu issued the first
death sentence in this
principality in almost
two centuries, condemn-
ing the husband or a
part..tlme prostitute to
death by hanging for
murdering her and two
ofhis children.
However , it was
almost certain that
Prince Franz Joseph II,
the ruler or tiny
Liechtenstein, would
commute the sentence to
lire imprisonment.
A FIVE-judge
criminal court panel
found Hans Frick, 42,
guilty or three counts of
murder and two counts
of attempted murder in
the Nov. 10, 1976 slaying
in the village or Balzers.
According to
tesLimony heard at the
two-day trial, Frick
quarreled for some time
with his 28-year-old wife,
who allegedly earned up
to $250 a night as a part-
time prostitute in Cbur, a
town in nearby
Switzerland.
FRICK CLAUIED
during the trial t~l the
gunshot which killed his
wife went off accidental.
ly but that he was then
seized by a frenzy and
killed his 9-year-old son
and 7-year-old daughter.
The shots narrowly mis·
sed a sister-in-law and
his third child.
Frick asked that the
charges be reduced to
manslaughter.
He was ordered held in
the principality's only
3ail in Vaduz pending a
decision on his plea for
royal clemency. Frick
will be transferred to a
prison in Switzerland tr
his sentence ts com-
muted.
Supennan
Comic Set
At$3,500
NEW YORK CAP> -•1f lhe pages of old comic
books look yellow to you,
look aeain. They're pure
aotd.
Consider thls item for "t
instance: a 1931 Action
No. 1 -the first iasue in
wbich Superman, the
superstar or comic
booki, appeared. It's
worth about $3,500, ac·
cord Ina to Gary Berman.
•
Wayne heads up 09r statewide mortgage banking operation.
So he's speaking for all .eight California First mortgage loan
centers. "Many banks run hot and '
cold on mortgage loans depend-
ing on the money supply ...
bL1t real estate agents and brokers
know we're in the market good
times and bad~'
That means when you need
money to buy a home, you know
you can call California First.
"Call us to make an appoint--
ment and we'll actually come
to your home to discuss your
applicatipn:'
Get to know 0ne of tne
· CAuFoRNtA fastest growiDg major
;.h',• '.-I .I ,,.: .. ', ' i« . ~ ·,' '
''
ST
FIRST BANK Meu1ber F. 0 I C.
banks in the state.
i •
Meet die people Calif~ FirsL
•
l
s
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Bi Cll.UG SH&t'F Ol-11!tllt'tw~Mtff Forq1ec Orana• Cont
CoJleg,e .tandout Tony A.cL
comando has pleyed •asatnat
some of the belt football teams
in the naUon this year-and he
1urprisln1ly ratea Arkansas
sliehlly better than No. 1-
ranked Texas.
Accomando, an All·
American running back at OCC in 197S, was Texas C~ris-
tl an University 's leadin1
rusher in '76, then was
switched te> wide receiver this
year.
TCU, wblCh compiled a 2·9
r•cord this aea on. ftll to na·
Uonal powera USC ($1·0>.
riansas (C·G) and Texaa
(44•14)-~n•d Accomando
thoUg)\t they were all powerful
t~ams. ··use was pretty good, Texas
waa a little better, but I
thought Arkansas was the best
ef the three," sau•• Accoman-
do. "I didn't get to play against
Ark ans as becaus~ or a
sprained ankle, but they were
really impressive from the
sidelines. Arkansas bas a lot of
small, qufck, strong guys on
BYU SCORES -Brigham Young's Glen Roberts scores
against the defense of Cal State (Long Beach ) defender
Larry Gray Monday night. BYU beat the visitors, 100-91 ,
in a non-conference collegiate basketball game
In Wild Finishes
Tro1am StillHave
The Golden Touch
CLOSE GAMP..S DEPT.-USC
and UCLA indeed 1av.e us a
game to remember Friday nigbt
when UCLA took a 27·26 lead "1th
2:51 left in the cont.est, only to
lose on a field goal with :02 show-
in1 on the clock, 29-27.
SC has the golden touch on wln-
nlng those kind of wild football
finishes. It did lt twlce against
Stanford, taklnt a 20-24 verdict ln
1969 and a 27·26 decision lb um.
Stanford 1ot somewhat even,
however, by b&11tn1 a 13-10
•
I was made weak that I miebt
learn to humbly obey.
I asked tor help Ula& I mllbt do
greater &bi.np;
I WU liYell lnfi.mll&y &Ila& I
mlpt do better thlnp.
I uked for riches that t might
bebllppy:
I was given poverty that I
mlght be wise. l Hked for power tba& I mlsM
h•n tbe pralle of me• i l was given weQllesa t.ba& I
nalght,feel tbe need of God,
I asked for all thin1s that. I
mtaht enjoy life;
1 w•• given ute that I might en-
joy all things.
I lot ...._, &bat I aake4 for,
ba& ver1tbla1 I laoptd tor.
Almo• ~ myaelf •!' •· 1pokea prayen were aaswfted.
I araoa1 all mea am moit
rlcbly bldsed.
..
defenae and they are all ove~
the place."
(Toxas turned back
Arkarut , 13·9,thbaueeQ).
"SC was bit and physical
and our ooach commented that
some ot their gu~ could stand
ln LA andaee Denv~r.
"Texu WU better than USC.
l Just don'taee bow anyone can
stop all tl\e speed tbey have.
One or the Jones boys has 9.1
speed and the other Jones can
run 9.3. And l:arl Campbell is
probably goine to win the
Heisman Trophy.
"And Texas' defense is No 1
. I
Ex-Yankees
Ace Meusel
Dies at 81
DOWNEY -Bob Meuse), a
member of the New York
Yankees famed Murderers' Row
of the late 1920s, bas died at
KalserHospitalhere. Hewas8L
The outfielder spent 10 of his 11
major-league years with the New
York team. He compiled a careeT
balling average of .309.
Hi.s most productive season was
1 n 1 SZS. when he led the
American League in home nms
33 -and runs batted in -138.
Meusel batted .337 with the
Yankees in 1927.
Meusel, a resident of this Los
Angeles suburb at the time or his
death, 1s survived by his wife and
daughter
Meusel was the regular left
fielder for the Yankees from 1920
until'i930. when he was traded to
Cincinnati. He was over-
shadowed on those New York
teams by Babe Ruth and Lou
Gehrig.
In six World Series. Meusel
batted just .225 in 34 eames.
Ange& Hire Sldnn~r
Bob Skinner. former manager
of the Ptuladelphia Phillies and a
longtime major league coach,
has been hired as a hitting in·
structor by the California
Angels
tucurr1-.1u
BUENOS AIRES, Ar-entina -
Guillermo Vilas defeated Jaime
Flllol Monday, 4·!, 7·3, 3·4, &-3 to
win the Argentine Tennis Open
championship.
Wtalc! Quk•
DETROIT ~ University of
Detroit basketball coach Dick
Vitale, whose whirlwind perfec-
tionism drove the team to na·
tlonal prominence, has resigned
because of a stomach ailment but
may stay on as athletic director.
Ruuia1U 1t'in
TOKYO -The Soviet Union
won the 1977 men'lt World Cup
volleyball championship Tues-
day nlehl with a 15·6, lS-2, 15-10
victory over Japan in the final
game of the championship round.
E'ooifJaU s~
BLACKSBURG, Va. -Frank
Moseley, athletic director at
Virginia Tech for 27 years, an·
nounced his retirement today in
the wake of the dismissal or bead
football coach Jimmy Sharpe. S:ee Brtef•, Page B3
College Buketb~I,.
Football Polls
• ,A
agafnat tho ruah tn the countni.
Plus they have a great placo
kicker ln Russell Erxleben.
They just have lt all,·• aaya Ac·
comando.
TCU, which lost all 11 gamei.
last year and had dropped 15
games ln a row before defeat·
ing Rtce (35·15), endtkt Its
season with a48·9 loss to Baylor
last Saturday.
. "The season waan 'l quite
like l expected it mleht be,•·
said Accomando. "We didn't
throw the ball as much as I ex-
pected. I caught only 10 passes
<one for a touchdown> and
spUt tlme wlth anoU\or rt•
ceiver.
"But I'm not totally disap-
pointed. It I had to do tt a1ain, l
don 'l know if I would have
come here to play football. It's
about 50-50, l really don't know
what 1 would do it I had a
chance to do it over.
"Everything else has been
good. I like the.people and the
area. Football-wise, it hasn•t
been loo good. It would have
been a whc)le lot better tr we
were winnlrig. ••
OAKLAND'S TED HENDRICKS (83) SLOWS DOWN MIKE COLLIER.
. '
Stahler Shakes htj;11)~
•
Raiders· QB Connec~ JJ:ith 3 TD Ptust¥
was on his back. He look a
punishing, head-on shot from
Bills defensive tackle Mike
Kadish an instant after releaslna
the ball on a 38-yard completion
to runnine back Clarence Davis.
'41'here was a mixup in the
blocking oo that play. It dldn 't
happen again. 1' said Raiders of-
rensl ve tackle Art Shell. •·we didn't have to pass too
often in the game. That helped,··
said guard Georse Buehler.
• •1'The Raiders beat ua with the
'big play.'' said 'defensive end
Sherman Wbite. who worke<S
across from Shell and 1uard
Gene/ Upshaw and sald "they
both played great games."
Stabler completed seven of 1.2
pat!leS for 166 yards, wltb his
touchdown passes 'IOlnC 28 and 1.2
yards to Cliff Brauch and 44 to
Fred BtleU1ikoff. Mark van
Ee1ben'J1143 yards rusbinc, giv-ing him 1,011 for the seuon, led
the ground attack, which ro~
up 307 yardS', 1
The Bills, who have lost 0 . ·~
Simpson to a knee inJury and
nine of their 11 games. this yeat.•
stayed ln the 1ame for a w~
with a one-dlpienslonet offense
Quarterbact Joe P'ergusoh threw
43 panes.
SCOA• aY OUA1tT•a& Bljtle.. J 1 J e-"
0.11.1 ... e IJ I i. t
A -~l,llll
f tUl llotlrfti
Alllht .. '(ero. Pau1,..n,.
lltt11rny.,• Penes
P ... b
Fwmbltt~
HATllTIU
I
i
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~ ........ ·-~~ ..... "':""~ ...... ._.,.._.,.._...,.._..l""P~----~-~---~··~R.,_-1i..,.~ • ......,•~••••...., .......... ._..-.._._..,.._ __ _
D~lY PflOt
l!ut11re Is Bright
For Fountain Valley
BJ' ROGER CARLSON
Ol•O.Uy,... .... lt ended in the dust at Sula
Monica Colle1e Saturda~ ni&bt in
a double overtime defeat that few
Foul\tain Valley Hi&h football
f ... will ever for1et.
But while the Baron1 • 11-20 loss
lo Loyola (Los Anfeln > HJgh Saturd~ came in t.be touabest
way lo swallow, Barons coach
Bruce Pickford says lhe future
may soothe the sting.
"Naturally." aays Pickford,
"when you lose a back like Willie
Gittens to lf1ild\Jalion you lose a
heckuva weapon. But we should
have·a eood tum in 1978. In the
backfield we'll have Sam Cen-
tofante, KeYtn Romine, Tim
Henlfman, Tony Pastluo and
Mark Wetmore back, alona with
quarterback GU Compton.
"And some kidl up from lhe
sophomores aren't 1oin1 to be too
2 Games at FV
bad ... especl•lly runnin1 back
Bill McTetr and quarterback An·
dy DeLuca. Kevhl Mar1erum
wlU be back at receiver, too.
We'll be all right and we'll have
goodslze.''
Assessin1 Saturday 's
heartbreaker, Pickford says:
"You can't cry over it, the klds
played well for 11 games and my
only regret ia they couldn't fl.nlsh
up in Anaheim StadJum (for the
CI F finals> because they really
worked for iL
''Of the four that are left in the
Big Five Conference, any of that
eroup or West CovJna or
ourselves could be a winner. P~
ple are sayiJli Loyola will win it
all now, but they stlll may have a
helluva time beatln& Los Altos
just to cet to the finals.
"We went for the percentage
play with the PAT try to send our
game into a third overtime and
we felt we bad the better team.
Our kicker hadn't milaed a con-
version all year. But that wun't
the only way we lost the came.
•·we \W>Uld have had a shot at a
field toal from the Loyola 12 at
the end or the half, but the of.
ficials called us for an We1at
alignment in a pro formation,
that is our ftanker llned up too
close to the line. We were called
for that once before, about five years ago.
•'And we missed on an earlier
field goal try and we had too
many crucial penaltlea ... Uke
when Jim Freeman eot wa out of
a hole with a beautllul trap play
only to see it called back.
''But we're not embarruaed
by the toes. Loyola wu a ven«
strong and physlcal team."
Pickford abo touches on the
play or Gittens, who rushed for
133 yards and two touchdowns to
close out bis prep career with S2
touchdowns.
Girls Powerhouses
"Willie baa made more
yarda1e in other 1ame1. but be
made a lot of yardage on his own,
running around and through a
very toulh defense."
Duel in Volleyball.
Was this year's 10-1 unit a bet-
ter one than the '76 team that
went 10·2? "We bad a super
group in '76," sa~s Pickford,
"and t.hb one had more depth.
It's hard to say. We dldn't pus or
play defense better than the '74
team ... I wouldn't put this year'•
team over the '76 team."
A classic doubleheader featur·
ing tbe top four suded 4-A tirb
volleyball teams in CIF playoff
com petition, will meet in
semifinal round action at Foun-
tain Valley HJgh School tonight
with three of the squads
representing the Orange Coast
area.
ln the 6 ·30 opener, Sunset
League champion Newport
Harbor (20-1), will face defend-
ing 4-A champion Laguna Beach
(32·2). co-ct)ampions or the South
Coast League this season.
Newport Is seeded No. 1 and
Laguna No. 4 in the playoffs.
Following this matchup, at ap-
pro xi ma tel y 8 o'clock, the
·Corona del Mar High Sea Kings
(24-2) will meet Bay League
kingpin Mira Costa (Manhattan
Beach ). CdM is seeded No. 2 and
is South Coast League co-
champion wWJe Mira Costa ii
seeded No. 3.
Tonight's competition will be
the first in dual ma,tch action
between \be team1 involved,
a lthough they have met in
tournament play earHer. Laguna
defeated Newport lo the Glen-
dale tourney in a one-game
match, then lost to Kira C.osta at
San Marcos where Newport was
the winner.
CdM and Mira Costa have splil
in their tournament matches
aKaiosleachother.
Coach Judy Fogt's NewP9rl
s quad is keyed around three
senion and three sophomores.
Marie Lundie, captain, Lynn
Droke and Karen Olson are the
senior starters. Kori and Kris
Pulaski along with Karl Rush,
ore sophomore starters.
Reserves include two juniors,
Area Preps
Honor Stars
The foUowing athletes were
selected players or the week
by their coaches following
ClF football playoff games
Saturday night.
OFFENSE
CRAIG LYONS, Newport
Harbor -Lyona threw two
key passes which set up
touchdowns, completed etaht
of 13 for ro4 yards and w111 by
far the most potent weapon ol
N'ewport Harbor's offense.
WILUE GITl'ENS, Poaa·
tala Valley -With 133 yards
on l3 carries, Gittens kept
Fountain Valley \n a touah same. He scored t,ouchdown1
on runs of six and two yardl.
SCO'M' SPEAa, Mlaalon
Viejo -Quarterbac:k s.,.ar
aettect l.:l> yanb thl'C)tlfh the
air, ~mpJetl111 lout o nine,
one for a touchdown. He abo eatti~d tho bltll twtce ror as
rda.
Ann Yardley and Liz
Echternach.
George Carey's Laruna Beach
squad baa four starters back
from lut year's championship
team including Unda Robertaon,
Nancy Tresselt, Karin Lane and
Karen Lynch. They are joined by
Janis Brahams and Sue Wetzel ln
the starting lineup with Sandy
Conway, Dana Erickson and
Cammy Chalmers complettn1
the squad.
Corona del Mar will have its
entire starting team back next
season. The lineup of coach
Kathy Bulmer includes AUeen
Semonsen, Cheryl Johnston,
Susie Crone, Monica Park,
Marcie Wurts and Sue Corea.
Lori Webb and senior Kathy
Tyler complete the squad.
Mira Costa finished fifth Jn the
Glendale tourney and second Lo
Newport at San Marcos. The Bay
League champions had a 9-1
league rei:ord and are 14-2 over-
all. Seven of the 12 team mem·
bers are seniors.
The winners toniaht will play
for the championship Saturday
CB> al Huntington Beach High
School. Olher title games wiU be
played at 1U·A),3 (2·A> and6:30
(3·A) alHtmtington Beach.
Looking back at those crucial
momenta ln overtime, Picktord
says: "I thought we bad boutht
the game when Ron Padl1la
blocked Loyola 'a field goal at-
tempt to put the 1ame into the
second overtime. We thoucht we
were beat when we couldn't
score first and Loyola had its
great kicker.
"But Padilla did a great job.·
He's a courageou. kid and the•
block eave us Hie. But tben they
completed their only pus of the
nlght ... and it was a 1ood call, a
screen away from the now. We
scored, but we mlaaed the point
after and that ended it."
TV, Radio Menu
TonJpt on Tetevlalon
6 p.m. (9) -NBA BASKET·
BALL -The Los Angeles Laken
meet tbe Cleveland Cavaliers in
a game taped earlier in the eve-
ning at Richfield, Ohio.
Tonight OD Radio
6:20 p.m. KKOP (93.5)
COLLEGE BASKETBALL -
Cal State (Long Beach) at Weber
State.
Common Foes Split
On NH-St. Paul Tilt
Who's favored to win Friday nJgbt'• CIF football showdown
between Newport Harbor and St. Paul Hilb of Santa Fe Sprtop?
Tbe opinions or two meh who should know are divided.
Servite Hilb (Anaheim) coach Ken Visser led bJa team to vie·
tories over both. He picks St. Paul by a narrow mar1ln.
Edlllon Hieb (Huntington Beach) coach Blll Workman saw hia
team lose to both. He picks Newport Harbor by a narrow marlin.
The game will be Friday ni&bt (8 > at Cerritos Colle1e.
Servtte beat Newport Harbor 24-0, but Newport Harbor was
playing without quarterback Craig Lyons, who was 1ufferina from a
shou Ider separation.
Senile did a slmllar job to St. Paul, beatln1 the Swordsmen
22-6, but St. Paul was abo playing handicapped-ill quarterback,
Tim Cowan, played only portion! ot the 1ame due to a concussion.
Edlaon lost to St. Paul 14·7, the Vt'inniftl toucbdQwn on a ._yard
kick return and lost to Newport Harbot"17·14.
Visser #ore!ees a low scoring battle and 1tves St. Paul the edte
because of its playoff experience ln recent years.
"Both have t.ndy eXdllent defense!,'' the Servile coach U)'I.
"Both hit very bard and thtre are no weakneues in either team 'a
pa111 defense. .
"When Ne¥fP(Jrt played us they never really clicked. Tumoven
kept their baclts acalnst the wall and their de!ense never 1ot a
chance to dJI In, "Newport's qbJrterback can drop back and throw very well,
whlle St. Paul relles more on the lrind-lt-out ruD111n11ame, •t Vluer
say1.
Workman atao proctlctl a low 1cortna aame but 1fvet Newport HarbOr the edl~ beeauae of L)'Ons.
"l tb1nk Newport hu a real eood chance to btat them." aa,a the
Edlson co Ch. "Ne"l)Ort won't run oa St. Paul beeau.ae tbe~ baven"t
J'Wl real well on an,ybody. but the)' have a qu.atterbaclt who can
throw the ball. I
•• Paul hlLI real hard, l>Ot they have a tendency to play a U\tle •
looae in the HCoitdary. Wt didn't pua well a1ainat NewpQrt'1 d•·
f ~e. l>Ul we ran with tbme succeu, ''Workman 1ay1. "f P> for the Sunaet Legge, '1 he conch.ades. 0 1'd tit. to aee New~ HarbOr I•\ Jnt.o lbt ftAala." •
FOOTBALL/BASKETBALL/VOLLEYBALL
M JOHN CARSON (31) WILL BE ONE OJ' SAN CLZMIN'fe'S KeY PLAYEJll.
San Clemente, CdM Top
South Coast Cage V~ta
There's a new look on the South
Coast League bas ketball scene
this season-five of the circuit's
eight schools have new head
coaches.
"
The turnover has been so hiah
that Dana Hills coach Art
Jenkins-beginning just his third
season-is the league's senJor
coach. None of the others has bad
his current job as lone.
Co rona del Mar, under second-
year coach Jack Errion, is the
Daily Pilot favorite to repeat u
champion, althou1b the Sea
Kinas will be hard-pressed to go
as far as they did last seuon-to
the ClF championship.
Unlveraily High (Irvine) and
San Clemente figure to balUe it
out for second, with Mtasion Vie·
jo not far behind.
Here's a capsule look at. thla
season's prospect.a: ·
eoro..a ul Jffar
Corona del Mar may not match
last season's 25·5 record, but the
Sea Kings nevertheleaa fiiure to
be a strong contender tor the
South Cout League buket.ball
crown.
The All·CIF duo of Jack Tu2
and Alex Black la difficult to
replace, but Errlon says he
wouldn't classify this season as a
rebuiJdingyear.
With fair size, good quickness
and deadly shooting, the only re-
building the Sea KJngs need are
the broken bones of Steve
Esposito and Mark Raina.
Esposlto. a starting 6-3 starting
forward for Jut. year's team, suf-
fered a broken ankle and won't
return to practice for at least two
more weeks.
Rains, a 8-0 1uard, baa a
broken collarbone and wUJ miss
at least four more weeks of ac-
tion.
Shannon (&-0, eenlot) and Todd
Pickett (5-9 junior).
Also t1surtn1 to see some play-
i q g time are forward• Kurt
Brockman (8·1) and Rick
Starne1 (6·1)1 Juniors who Join
pracUce late aue to football.
s.nae.e..ie
San Clemente II cominf ott a
12-2 leaaue campalp 1n which
the only defeatl came at the
hands of champion Corona del Mar~ and tbaTrttoDa may be just
u stronithiaseuoa..
One d.l.stinctlon San Clemente
wUl bout ia the tallest 1uard in
the lea1Ue, 6-6 John Carson. A
forward last season and the only
returnlnt starter. Carson will
play at IUard often to take ad·
vantage of his 1bootln1 and ball
handling abUity.
By contrast, San Clemente's
starting center will probably be
6-3 Gene Gednov, an aeeressive,
strong senior who played with
tbe JV team last season.
John Stephens hu an iD.sJde
track (Of' the other auard poai·
lion. The 5-11 aenlor was a vani·
ty reserve last season and 19 a
drivin1. aggressive type.
A top candidate for forward 11
6-5 Mark Kleln, a tran.sler and
two-year varsity starter from
41(.San Dlmu Hlah. Klein, a flnt
team all-leafl\ler tut aeason. ii
emeratng aa one ot the team '1 top shooten.
Mike Wade, Just 1\arUnt to
practice now alter a c:ampafan
on the football fJeld, fa a 6-1
swingman who could vie tor a
starting forward spot.
Others who will ue a con·
alder able amount of playlos Ume
are the Mulll1an brotbers, Shawn and Brian. both ,.,
1uard1, and Derek Jonea, a s.o
1wtn1man.
Coach Rich Skelton baa taken
over for stao DeMagato. brlnaina
with him an Jmpres1lve recorct
At Workman HJth ln lb• City of
Industry, Skelton woa Jaal\19
Utlea lD four ot ftve Ha.tom.
When healthy, Esposito will
probably •tart in the front court
alonfaide Jim Hitchcock (8-1) oc
Shawn Ahem (6-3). HJtcbcoek
wu on the vanity aquad laat.
se11on but aaw UttJe playlnt Ume
wbUe Ahern, a sophomore, ii up
f~rn the JV team. •
Jell Burden lJ the leadlq C&D·
dtdate for the center poeltlcn.
He's a 6-7 se~or up from the IV.
Tbe suard oanCt.ldatn lnchacle
Katt Oaaood (6-U HJ'lior>. Court
I C •
GOLF I MISCELLANY .
SOUTH COAST VJSTA ·
Conlln&aed from Page 82
Steve DeCuu (S-10 1uard > and
.Jiin Felcht, (S.0 forward). Also
in the pacmaN are Brian Zahn
<S·ll guard), Jim Flynn <6·1
forward). Btuce Kata <5·8
guard), Scott Moore (S-11 guard)
and DeVin Bower (5-10 «Uarcl>.
DailaBflla
It will be a patch-work basket·
ball team Dana Hills Hi&b fields
this season • .. We'veeotalltUebitofevery-
thln1," says head coach Art
Jenkins who la trying to mold a
team around two returning varsi-
ty reserves, three JV players,
two guards off the sophomore
team and another from the
freshman unit.
What the Dolphins don't have
ts experience. Chris Goller, a 6-3
senior forward, and Doug An-
drews, a 6-3 junior, are lettermen
wbo averaged less than four
polats a game. Andrews will be
out at least until January with a
major injury and may not even
get a chance to play this season.
Still, Jenkins remains op-
timistic that the Dolphins can im·
prove on last year's 3-11 South
Coast League finish. Overall,
Dana Hills was 9-16.
.. Potentially, we have better
basketball players as a whole
than we've ever had," he says.
••My main concern is that we
don't have any experience play·
mg together."
The Dolphins should be a bet·
ler rebounding team. But with
just an eight-man roster, Dana
Hills wiJJ be in deep trouble a! its
big men get into foul trouble.
Sophomore Scott Wilson, 6-3,
and seniors Tom Thornton and
David Baur, both 6-2, are fighting
for front court positions
alongside Goller. Junior Mike
Samuels, 6-2, can play either
guard or forward while guards
Eric Smythe (6-0 junior), Dick
Jeffers (5·5 senior) and Jere
Olsen C5·8 senior) round out the
squad.
After concentrating on fun.
damentals, "i>ana Hills is just
now working on game situations
"We won't be quite ready for
the opener," J enkins admits,
0 but I trunk they 're just practice
games anyway We have to work
through the practice games and
hope we'll be there by the league
season."
El Toro
El Toro is stricken with the
same malady that most of the
other South Coast League teams
have-a lack of height. But
Chargers first-year coach Ed
Felix figures to make up for it
with tough defense and ag.
gressi ve offense.
The Chargers will be without
high.scoring guard Bob Charles
and his brother Robin, who
transfered to Capistrano Valley.
Two returnmg starters bolster
the front line 6·3 center
Matt Simpson and 6·1 forward
Mike Holmes. El Toro also has a
returning letterman in 6-1
swingman Kelly George.
But perhaps the best all-round
player on the team will be a 6-2
transfer from West Virginia,
forward Rick Reid His strengths
are ball handling and shooting.
An up-and-coming player who
could see some playing time is
BRIEFS ..•
Continued From Page Bl
Moseley, 66, had hired Sharpe
in 1974.
The 38-year·old Sharpe, whose
teams compiled a 21·22·1 record
in four years but won only three
games this season, was fired
Monday by Tech president
William F. Lavery with four
ye an left on his contract.
Cal Top• Dralce
BERKELEY -Former Los
Amigos <Fountain Valley) High
basketball star Tom Schneider-
john scored 17 Points to help his
California Bears teammates re·
cord a 97-78 coJJeee basketball
triumph over visiting Drake
Monday night.
NllL'.l'nule ·
Pitts-
JACK ERRION
CdM Cage Coach
freshman Wayne Carlander, a
6-5 center who bas a good, left·
handed shooting touch.
Last year's leadmg JV scorer
will probably see some ac·
lion 5-10 guard Mark Walker.
Another 5·10 guard up from the
JV team 1s Mike Wilson.
Also in the picture are 6·5
backup center Mark Lee and 6-0
1-tuacd Terry Quigley, up from the
JV's
Others who might play include
Jeff Gibbs, a 5·11 guard coming
over from the football team, and
Marvin Taylor, a 6-1 forward
also coming off the football field.
Scott Burman, a 6·3 forward,
could also see some action.
Laguna Beach
Mike Roche's first year as
head basketball coach at Laguna
Beach High School figures to be a
trying one
Only one full-time starter re-
turns from last year 's Artists
squad which finish ed 12-14 over-
all and 5-9 in the South Coast
League.
Complicating matters as the
fact that three players Roche
was counting upon won't be
available because of football in·
Juries.
The tallest player on the squad
1s 6·2 Bucky Baker but he hasn't
played basketball m three years.
Thus, Roche will mold his team
around 5-9 senior guard Terry
Haught, who averaged 6.9 points
a game a year ago, Randy Smith.
a 6· l forward who missed most of
last season with injuries, and
Jim Richardson, who averaged
22 points a game for the junior
varsity team.
The Artists will rely heavily
upon a press. a five-man fast
break and a passing offense.
Roche says his team, despite a
glaring lack of !>IZe, will be
physical.
••we'll put a lot of pr sure on
th ball and teams ate aoiog to
have to run to play with u.s:•
Rochesaya
"I think' we'll be falrly
physical. If we work hard on the
boardJ &Dd scnen • lot, with our
quickness we can cet. ~ome ot
those rebounds.
.. And if we can Jet the de-
fensive boal'ds, thlDk we can
play anybody." ' '
Varsity candlda.t.el up from Uii
junior varsity team inclu~ an
Calderwood (S·U. Stet Lipson
CG·l), and Stu Pattison (S-10).
Curt Ford (6-C), who broke bis
hand playing football, won't be
ready for basketball for two
more months while Doug Wellel
( 6· l) is out for the identical
reason.
In addition, Bill Gom_pf,
Laguna Beach's itll~verythlng
football star, can't play basket-
ball because of recurring knee
problems.
Costatffaa
Joe Pomlnlc takes over the
head coachlna reins at Costa
Mesa from Larry Sunderman,
who resigned to tak~ the top post
with the basketbatrprogram at
Estancia High in Costa Mesa.
The out.look for Dominic's fint
season isn'i rosy. ''Realistically,
we 're faclng an 0-ZO year,"
Dominic says. "We went G-14 in
summer l~gue, and that's what
I 'm basingiton."
The Mustangs lack each of the
ingredients neeessary to build a
winner-size, speed and shoot·
ing. What they do have is youth
and aggressiveness.
"We're gonna bustle, ..
Dominic says. "We'll bie the type
of team that gets the fioor burns
and dives for loose balls ...
The varsity unit includes eight
seniors, four junioris and one
sophomore. A strong possibility
exists that Costa Mesa will start
no one taller than 8..0.
Battling for the center spot are
two 6·3 juniors, but Dominic says
he may start a three-forward of-
fense and leave out. the post posi-
t ion altogether.
The center candidates are Jeff
Sutterfield, last year's
sophomore team MVP, and Jeff
Hiscock, a transfer student from
Canada.
Bill Bissett, a 5-ll junior, and
Dave Dawe, a S-10 senior, are
le ading candidates for the
forward jobs. ·
Vying for guard spots are two
5-8 seniors, Stan Stavricos and
John Willingham. Also in the run-
ning are Scott Miller (5-10
junior), Kirk Dominic CS-6
junior) and Steve Lux (5-10 sophomore).
Other players ln the picture·
are Mark Falke (6-0 forward),
Chris Beasley (5-10 forward·),
Brian Richardson (5-10 forward)
and Jim Edson (5-10 forward).
Pitt Coach Predicts
Super Grid Divisio!f-
JACKSONVILLE, Fla (AP)-
College football's major con-
ferences and independents prob-
ably wall go into an NCAA elite
class by next football season, or
1979 at the latest, says Pittsburgh
coach Jackie Sherrill.
"Division lA will go into effect
next year, I think." he told a
news conference while here Mon-
day to arrange for a practice
field for Pitt's Dec. 30 Gator
Bowl game against Clemson.
It will bring about a chance in
schedules and probably 12-game
seasons for teams with big
stadiums, average attendance.of
22,500 or more and eight mlnor
sports, be said.
"That eliminates a lot of peo-
ple," Sherrill said. "Miami, for
instance, would be in trouble.
Most major conference Dlembers
would be lA, but the Missouri
Valley, Mid-America and
Western Athletic conferences
would be left in Division 1."
The National Colle1tate
Athletic Association now divides
its members into Divisions 1, 2
and3.
Most Divislon l echools have
schedules set for IQ yean arid
more ahead, but Sherrill said be
believes thoee wm be changed
with the 1plit. of the dlvldoo, 1rith
more lnteraecUonU aames
between top teams '
A Dlvillon 1A team probably
will tie ~ulre<t to play SS per;
cent of its 1ames aia.INt acboot
in thatdiYisiM.
Sh1:rrill said his Pitt tum sur-
prised him by developina as fast
as it did after losins Tony Doraiett
and 40 other pl~ers fro~ it.s 1976
national champions.
"I realized the problems we
had when we started spring prac-
tice," he said. "We bad to de-
velop a new offensive line, new
defensive ends and linebackers
and find two kickers.
"That two weeks of pre·season
camp this fall made our team.
We were ready for Notre Dame,
then quarterback Matt
Cavanaugb's wrist injury set u.s
back. We got a lot of help from
our fine freshmen. As many u
seven freshmen started one
game."
Pickeroo Winner
' Mardi Nichols of Balboa la the
final Daily Ptlot Pl11kln
Plckeroo football euesalng COil·
test winner.
She missed only four of 30
1ames and .WtnS a year'• metn·
bership In tbe Newport. NauUlus
Physical Fitness Ccmter.
Ten entrants Ued for second
·place with (lve niW and by us·
lne tho tle·breaker, It was de-i
termined that A.O. TOIJtUo of
Newport Beach was · second.
Third place went. to Robm J0rte1
of Huntiniton Beach.
The _t'YQ runnensup each ,.
cei•e SlO stn cer:Ullcatea from SOatli Coast Plua.
She Says Never Reach:ed Point
'77_ Was Of Coritentment--lrwin'1
:
Terri.hie ByHOWAllDLuANDY b·ack•round bu ab~ sldertts don' kn~ how:i
ot .. Del,_,...,..._. his life. ' 10od they really have it· Hale Irwin bas been .. It baa helped in Ulo here.,.
By a Dally Pilot Writer one of the most consls· way I think abOut every· Golf Is a business to
The year 1971 wasn't tent mone~ winners on \bing tn Ille,,. be say1. J.rwin and be spends the
exactly the moat en-the P~of~s1onal Golfen "There an! acfilevers in off-season bunUnJ and
couraging or succeasful Association CPGA) tour sports and in the bu.sl· being with h.fa family in
for Jan Stephenson on t~~ l~st seven years, ness world and there are their home near St.
the women • s pro. famshmg In the top 13 those who don't. Those Louis.
fessional golf tour eacbofthoseseasons. whoba'Vegoalstostrive ''Therelsmoretoliht
despite the fact it was Bu~ _he_ also knows for. thancoll."hesays. "Uis
one of her most consis-what 1t as like to g~t up on "I have never reacMd my buslneM. But I can't
tenlcampaigus. Monday morning to any point Jn my life play all of the tline
When asked about the qualify for that week's where I have been con-because I iet bol'ed. l .1·
season, the native of tournament and be tent and have bad llketohuntaodlwantt.o ••
Australia answered with knows how it feels to nothing to look forward spend a lot of Ume with.., 1 one word while awaiting ta.ke a 9 on a par-4 bole to. Yes, 1 have periodic my cblldren." i:
her match against Hale wtthout an out-of-bQunds ego trips when I win but He doesn't hit many, •
Irwin in the Challenge of shot and to ~alloon to 10 that is temporary. But golf balls· during the.
the Sexes at Casta Del over ~ar on nme holes. the philosophy developed winter in Missouri. H~ ;
Sol Golf Course in Mis-Irwin recently compet-in sports carries over to goes to Arizona abou', •
sion Viejo recently. ed tn the Challeo1e o! ~e everyday life. 11 three da¥1 before the
"Terrible! 11 Sexes eolf competition Havin1 travele(l to firat tournament ot the
Then she went on to ex· against Jan Stephenson other parts of the world year and after that
plain: at the ~ast~ Del So~ <?olf inc I uding England, period ls bitting balls ,
"It was my most eon: Course m M158ion V1eJo. Japan Australia and where be wants them to ,
sistent year. Bull woulc' "I had the worst other places, Irwin f.,,ls go. •
rather have a few stretch of ~les I can re-too mahy people don't "There is a dif!enmc~ • !
brilliant tournaments member, either as an appreciate what they between hittine tbeml"i
and a few bad ones." a m ate u r .or a Pro· have. wbero you want tbem w
Early in the year she fess~onal, this year in the "We've got a beck of a ao and scoring. You ,
dropped an oven shelf on B~lt1sh Open. I started deal eoing for WI here," don't. chip as close and ,
her leg and burned w1th a par, bogie and he says. "People who yourpuWngiaoffbutl»y
herself so badly she was tbre~. hepars .altols go one complain bad better HawaU, l bope to be r&i,.1 forced to take a week. ort. over• rec · think twice before they a d y tor a s er i p u n.
Then she hurt her back "'Theo it happened. J rap this country. The dia· challenge." s
and had to take addi. took a 7 on a par·5, a 9 on
tlonal time off. Bot~ a par-4 and bogied the
forced vacations caroe next two holes.
during tbe middle of the "On the par-5, I had a
seasonandcausedberto good drive, but my
lose prlze money. second shot was in a
"Then I gave up in the bunker, a menW error. I
U.S. Open whtn l was bad an impossible lie and
one shot behind the bad to go sideways to get
leader," she says. "It is out.
the only time I can re· "On the next hole, I
member giving up and bad another &ood drive
because I didn't. try and and used a three-wood
. double bogied the last from the middle of the
two boles, I went from fairway but it was short.
second to fourth place. and the ball was plugeed
"I cried for about four <covered) and out of
hours after that one sight in the bunker. I was
because it was so terri· given an unplayable lie
ble when I gave up." in the trap and droppe4
Then in Japan, sbe but ll plugged again and 1
took a 9 on the last hole was hitting fo11r.
because she played .. I caught the ball
"safe." perfectly and went over
"l pl~ perfect golf the green into some
for 53 boles and I had five heather and gorse. I
shots to play with on the chipped on and-three·
final hole. It was a tough. putted for a 9." .------------------...::;. 185-yard three-par over Irwin isn't complain· wal~r and I decided to ing, simply stating that
play sate. I hit a baU in any golfer can have a
the water and bad other bad hole or two, regard·
problems and lost the less of bow well they do
lead. most of the time.
''That taught me never He finished fourth on'
t 1 _, but to "' I the money list this year 0 P ay a .. e •0 or With ~ ... ~ --n and tt. the grffn and never look -~ 'WU .. ., back." was the first year slnce
In Texas she was one be started in 1968 that he
shot out. of the lead when haan 't increased his
she three-putted. Her money winning total. ln
caddy .ln!ormed her of 1976 he won $252,118, h1a
· h lti d h highest total. er pos on an 1 e When be ret11rned started trying for ~
birdies. Instead, abe from EQl.land, I.rwin set-
fb ree-putted three Ued down and won three
straight holes. tournaments-Che AUan·
Stephenson, deaptto ta Open. Hul ot Pame
th t tr ..a and San ArW>oio Open. ese rua a"1ng mo· He put himself .......... 1b menta, waa one of tbe wuvu m 0 1 t c 0 n a l 1 t e n t college wi.th a football
performers on the tour acbolanhip and wu a
and oneoftbe more trim defensive baclt at. the
better looking playen. • Unlvenl&y of COiorado
In 197' sho waa picked and be feela bJa alhleUc
es the rookie ot the 1911"··-----~---.... on the LPGA tour. She
w11 AwtraUan funlor P"!"~~-..9"!..--._
champion in 1IR1, 1888
and 1971 be.fore tumlQJ
prolnlm.
She won four
Auatrallan prOte.&ional
tou nam ti .iiber firtt,
year and captu.rtCI the
Auatrallan Ll>GA eh*1n~ plau_~p for th HCOIHi time thllteuon.
She baa WOil the Blr-
n&MIOClalilc IDd the
Sar ~ opjiiri m
Ui1I ~.'*ht!' 1t7~
Women'e~U
( -I
-.;.·"-----.;;.-............ __ .... _. __ . ____ ......._ .......... ~
Business
Tqx "»:isgrace' to Linger
... ~
Strokes Probed
By w.u.na J:. MSAU .~ ...... c. ....... . Maybe the b~comt tax 1yatem
tan 't IUCh a clflfr•ce after UJ:
The cn>wcla uaed to cheer wben
Jimmy Carter vow..cl • eomffete
overhaul of the tu code. "l la a
dl11race to t,he h1man race,"
he'd 1111 and they would dleer
some more.
But attacldni the tu law1 and
rewritlq them are vuuy dit-
ferent undertakln68.
"ALI. MY UFE 1 have heard
prom1"1 about tu refQf,rn, but lt
oever qutte happen•, ' Cuter
aaid ln accepUn' the Democratic
presidential .nomination, "with
.Your help we are finally golq to
make it hafl>ln. And you can de-
pend onlt. •
But not oow and not soon.
The pro1ped now ls that Carter
will recommend that Congress
en1ct tax reducUoos in the $15
bUlion to '2C> billion dollar rango
in 1978, but that he won't propoH
any major overhaul until later.
His package apparenUy wlll in-
clude some minor changes the
adminiltraUon can call a first in·
staJtment on the promised re-
form effort.
Model wears eye sensors attached to discs that resemble
contact lenses and sensors attached to ear plugs as she
demonstrates a diagnostic device designed to detect
strokes. The system, developed by Narco Scientific In-
dustries, Inc., Fort Washington, Pa .. meausres blood
flow bet ween the heart and brain.
WHEN HE WAS campaigning,
Carter said it would take him al
least a year in office to put
together a detailed, com·
prehensive tax reform plan. He
said he wasn't coin& to try to do it
one piece at a Ume becauae that
way, interest groups could con·
centrate their forces to block ac-
tion on their favorite tax pre-
rerences.
Through most of the campaign
season he avoided specifics, say-
ing only that be wanted to over-
haul, simplify and reform the
whole 40,000·page tax code at\d
would do it ln such a way as to
Solicitations Clarified
'Not a Bill' Message to Gain Emphasis
By The Assoclac.ed Press
A postal service rule taking ef-
fect Dec. 8 should make it easier
to tell the dllference between
bills and advertising clrculans or
other mail soliciting your busi-
ness.
The law already requires print·
ed notices on such solicitations
, saying that the item Is not a .bill
or invoice. But, say authorities,
••p,!aiJers sending solicitations in
the form of bills or statements of
account have tended to place the
statutory notice . . • on their
mailinga in a manner little
calculated to bring the notice to
the attention of the recipients of
the soliclta.Uon. ''
THE NEW RULE deals with
how prominent the notice must
be and what It can say.
The notice mu11t be printed in a
color contrasting with every-
thing else on the advertisement.
It will have to be at least 30-point
type, or three times larger than
normal newspaper printing.
Advett.ilers have a choice of
phrasing.
ONE OPTION requires the
notice to say: "This ls a soUcl-·
talion tor an order of goods or
services, or both, and not a bill,
invoice or statement of account .
( NEWS TO USE )
due. You are under no obligation
to make any paymPnts on ac-
count of this offer unless you ac-
cept this offer
The other choice reads: "THIS
IS NOT A BILL." all in capital
letters. If the advertiser picks
this method, he or she would also
have to Include a statement, in
18·polnl type, saying: "This is a
solicitation. You are under no ob·
ligation to pay unless you ;ic<:ept
this offer "
The rule prohibi ts thl' .111
verUsers from usini; ~uch quilh-
fymg statements as "notice re-
quired by law."
BlJSINESSWOMF.N -A
federal task force appointed by
President Carter is trying to
identify and study obstacles that
discourage women from entering
and succeeding in business.
<Related column, Page BS >.
The study will cover programs
and pracUces both In govern·
meot and the private sector.
Public partklpatlon ts invited.
Comments should be sent. to
Charlotte Taylor, executive
director, Jnteragency Task
Force on Women Business
Owners, U.S. Department of
Commerce, Room 5019,
Washington, D.C. 20230.
HIRE MORE STUDENTS -
Some employers wut be allowed
to hire as many as aix full-time
students ~t less than the
minimum wage under a new
Labor Department rule. The department previously baa
allowed agricultural, retail and
service establishments to hire as
many as four students at 85 per·
cent of the minimum waee. The
new rule expands the number to
~ix
T he current minimum wage ts
$2.30 an hour. To employ the stu-
dents at less than tbls. the
employer would have to certify
that his or her action would not
i nterfere with the full-tlme
employment opportunities for
other people.
MO·PED 111EPT8 -The Na·
tional Crime Prevention Assocla·
tlon says theft of mo-peds is in·
creasing at an alarinlng rate.
· The light weight -90-120
pounds -and value -$400·$500
-of the mo-peda make them a
target for thieves, the association .
says.
Honda, Toyota
Raise Car Prices
DETROIT CAP) -Honda and To)'Ola can hne
announced price lncreues of 4 percent and 3 percent
respectively. ··
American Honda Motor Co. 1a1d the eost increase
is effective Dec. 1. Chris Schmillen, vice president of
auto sales for the r----------
Japaneae·owned auto
manufacturer, said the
price lncftase was trif·
gered by "appreclaUon
lo the value 01 the yen
and normal lnllaUoo.
Pl ICE INCRl!!A8£8
in molt states include a
'120 lncrease to•·• tor a two·door, four-1pee~
dt<lre-.e tu• on tbe averap
man.
Sottln& hl1 admlnlatraUoq'f
a1enda, Carter bad said that be
would come up with tu recom·
mepdatlons early tbla fall. 'nle
dra1tsmen have been at work for
montba. Their propoaala are ex-
pected to ~ read1 Cor Carter
aqmetlQ)e tbla week, and for
Con1reu at\er lt reconvena 1n
mid-J anu.ary.
Other Priorities, 'Realities'
Delay Comprehensive Reform
AS THE TIMETABLE slipped,
the proposal• have become Jess
ambltlous, and S.CreluY ot the
Treesury W. Mtch.ael Blumeo·
that says the leglalatl.on seat to
the election-year Conaress will
be r~laUvely 1dmp .
• Campaigning, er was firm
and specific on o feature of bis
tn plan: He ays sald be
would seek nd the tax pre-
ference foc apltal Jalns. He said
all lncom 1bould be treated
alike, so proflta on the sale of
stock, real tale or other usell
would be tax at tho same rate
as other income.
All indications e that the pres-
!dent will not recommend that.
cbaoae,atle~tnotnow.
UNDER PRESENT LAW,
there's a tax break for •aJns on
the aale of useta held.for at least
nine monUa1. The period in-
creases to 12 montha eltecUve
J • l . 11.f\y percent of such
capital calna are exempt from ln·
come tu.ea. ~ Or the taxpayer ean elect to
pay a lower·tbaft-ordloary rate
• on the full capital 1aJn. an alternaUv~wh!ch la to the ad van·
tage of some people in blah tax
brackets.
"I Intend to take oo myself, as
a president'• responsibility, at
one lime, a complete and com-
preberuli\le tax reform elf ort,"
.Carter said In a camp~n ln·
terview. "I would move to treat
all income the same and remove
LOS ANGELES ( -A Superior Court judae hu struck
down a 193C state conati td.ional amendment that allowed only
California-based banks and aa=and loan usoclaUona to char1e
more than 10 percent interest on lo .
In a not.ice of intended decUl Judie Lester E. Olson ruled
that the amendment violates equal·proYc:Uon rights and the ln·
· teratate commerce clause of the U.S. ConaUtuUon.
THE USURY AMENDMENT, OLSON a.ld lo a 2'1-paae OPin·
ion, bad failed ln its original 10&1 of protectin1 small borrowers
while unfairly penalizio1 large out-of.state banks as well as such in-
stitutional investors aa life lnsurance companies, penalon funds and
mortgage broken1.
The large buaineBS loans made by these concerns ac~unt for
about 85 percent ot the nation's leading and normally command in-
terest rates of more than 10 percenL -
Olson's declJlion came out ot a lawsuit filed a1ainst the state and
the attorney general by tbe Committee Again.st Unfalr Interest
Limitations, composed of more than two dozen out-of·state banks
and savings and loan associations as well as Institutional lenders.
Over The Counter
HASOUlfW)a
(.NEWSANALYSIS J
the sharp di.ltl.nct.lozs now drawn
dcpencUn1 oo where the ltlcome
ls derll'ed."
BVT BLUMBNTRAL, IN a
Wall Street speech tut week,
virtually ruled out a proposal to
eltmlnate the capital 1atna tu
break. "We f\llly understand the
impot\ant. role that preCerenUal
tax rates for capital •ain.a ha~
played ln encoura11ni capital
formation -especially I« ven-
ture capital and new bualneu,"
be sald. "We will, of coune, take
this into accou.nt ln deslenlnl r.
forms to reduce or elbnlnate UD·
justified tax preferences."
The cbaQCiDI outlook on
Carter tax prop0eaJ1 atems fJ'om
competln1 priorities -and
political rulltlu. Con1reu 11.
likely to do a Jot more tax cuttiq
than reform.in& In the 1978 etec.
lion year, no matter what. the
White House re<:ommeods.
At 7 percent, unemployment ls
still a major problem for tbe Ml·
ministration. particularly u it
enter• a coo.aresslonal campalp
year. So, as he wu a year •&o ill
planning fQr a new adminlltra·
Uon, Carter Is looklQf at
measures to stimulate the
economy, lncludl.na a tax cut to
put more money into the bandl ol
busineu and coiiaumert. Tbe
problem .is compounded Ulla time
by the tact that Social Securi\y
and enern tu lncreuea will
work lo the Opposite directJon. ·
So that campaip promise to
overhaul the whole tax code will
have to wait, probablylUlW 19'19.
l/paa11dDe.,..
MUTUAL FUNDS
I
\ , I
s DAILY PILOT
Get SBA Help
By SYLVIA POaTSt /
The Carur admlnllt,.uon 11 tponaorln• a '2•• prolf&m
under whlcb the Small Buatnei• ~d~lnj1tratlon ls launcbt.oa a Women·l'1·8u.stnesa Own rsbl eampaicn. 'l'tle
tar1et ls boo nliUlon ln 1oa.nt per quarter or women. made
by bahb with tbt federal 1ovtmment'11uarantee. To set the prosr-am olf the cround, the SBA baa been
boldine one.day 1emin•n Cor bank ottlcl&Js and interested:
women. At these .. mlnars. women are heartna dllcuulonl of personal quallllcatjon1, ftnanclnc a bualneas, aourcea of
capital, forma oCf>wllneu or1Ulbatton.a, market1n1 and ad·
nrtism., bualneu r~rds, raources locally avallabl•,
and conaumer aad bu.sb\ess relation...
SEllllNAU ~DY HA VE BEEN held In Atlant..
Little Rock, Wichita, Denver, D•llas and Houaton. Still to
come are meetinas in Hartford, WubJnrton, Memphis and
Miami. More racts about the aemlnars are n1Ua&le from
Barbara B. Dunn, director ot Women in Buslntsa and
Consumer Affairs, SBA, 1'41 L. SL N. W., Wublnctoo, D.C.
20t16.
Two-day semlnars for women already ln business will
be held in t.he SBA '1 regional olfice11 between Jan.-ary ucl
Maytm.
The San Franclac:o regional omce of the &BA has a Uat
of spring data. Emphasis wlll be placed on improvlnt the
opportwi!Ues for women to bid auccesafwly ror aovenament
contracts and on dlasemlnatins procuremeot informaUon.
Money's
Worth
"The SBA la aolna
to have a 'MW look• -
internally, wlth sreater
stress on the ap.POint.. ment and promcitloa of
women, and extenally,
with a 1tron1 deflniUve
pro1ram to encou.r11e
buaineu ownenhJp by worn en." Ka. Dunn a.ya .
.. WE ABE COMMl'ITED TO'QIE USE of SBA u a ma· ~
Jor Instrument to a18'1t women in 1ainln& entry into the
small business sector."
At the start, tbls campaign is to be seared to abort--term
goala to reorient SBA prloriUes. A pilot Pl'Olfl?D will be de·
veloped in an area where women already have experience.
Focus will be on needs of women seelrlng bualness Joans
through UNI Small Bualpess Investment Company pro1ram. R~tlred business volunteers and active execUves wm
provide counaeUnc on management and training managers.
The SBA will lncreue the number of women loan offi~rs
and superviaory officers to provide more sensitivity to tho
probltmt women face in business. In each ot the SBA 's 10
re1lonal offlaes, representatives will be dealtnaled for
women In bualnesa and to help women who wlab to set up
businesses or who are bavinl trouble 1n repaylnJ SBA Joans.
ova THE LONGER TERM, 111E SBA 1Lrate1Y Will
be keyed to developing specific programs.
The need for the pro1ram is dramatbed by these
st.aUaU~:
-While women make up 51.3 percent ot the naUon's
populaUoo. they own only 4.6 percent of the buslnemta.
-Of all SBA loans Jaat year, only 11 percent went to
women; in dollar terms, the proportion was 8 percent.
-JN FISCAL 1m, £<JANS to women bave been averai·
lnl abouta7 percent less Jn dollar amounts tbanother 1081\S.
-Jn 1J176, only 11.9 perctnt of thole coun.elM throuth.1
the SBA Management A.salstanee provama were women.
DAIHATSU TRUCK Dll11H8UTOA NAM!D
Rlvtex lndu•trt•• t.o Promote Vehlde In U.S. .,
Distributor Set I . l
For Vehicle Sales '
RJvla lnduatrtea, Inc., Santa Ana, hu anoouncecl a1reements with J1paneae firm. to ~m• Western 1\ata
diatributor for J)aibatsu Kot.or Sa.lt1 Co., Ltd., ror tbelr MW
'"ma·frame ModeJ B 20 •lec:trie trlk• and the Dal.batsu lll· jet 55 wtff fUU cab and cutaway "'ckup truclca.
'l'hree vehld•, dlatrtbu\M worldwide, will be.market·
eel 1n1Ually 1n the U.S. '" Ari10na1 California, Coloredo. Ide.ho, Mootana. Nevada, Nw Mexico, Ore1on, Ttxu,
Utah, Wuhhteton and Wyo mine.
.. DAil Y PILOT
T l 'LSl>1\ \
EVENING
a~ e u a oo a N!WI
• 80HAHZA
"A Ofeam To Dream" G THEAVENGER8
Steed till• Into .,,.,,,Y hMd•
and Emma le cot down to alze.
G) MICKEY MOUSE CLUB
8) SUPERMAN
''Money To Burn"
Ir!) VILLA ALEGRE
5:SO G) BEWITCHED
"Allergic To Macedonian Dodo
Bird•" m ADAM-12
''Taking It EHy"
'1!> FREEHAND SKETCHING
"Aerial Perapectlve1"
e:OO a CBS NEWS au NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI
Or. Brackett tries to pe<auade a
mother to keep her deformed
baby. Q BASKETBALL
Cleveland Cavali811 va. Loa
Angeles Lakera GJ THE BRADY BUNCH
Troubles beset girl-hater Bob-
by when he II kissed by a llttle
girl who later report• ahe haa
the mumps.
Q) THE ROOKIES
Lieutenant Ryker tak .. • P«-
sonal Interest In finding the vic-
tim of a kidnapping.
ED ZOOM
~AS MAN BEHAVES
Ollelana lelce1
Ron Howard arri~es
home after a
fraternity initiation
looking somewhat
like a d ishe vele d
chicken on Happy
Days, tonight at 8 on
ABC, Channel 7.
D (fl HOLLYWOOD
SQUARES
G) THE BRADY BUNCH
Jan, bellevlng ahe la being
Ignored, buya herself a
brunette wtg.
g) LET'S MAKE A DEAL fa LA. INTEACHANOE
"lnalde Straight"
fl!) NEWSCHECK
()) THE GONO SHOW
Pottle end Ralph are black-
bal1ed, Richie a. told not to
auoclat• with them. m CAROL BUANm AND
FJJIENDS
Guest: Stev. Lawrence.
GI MOVIE
"A Conversation With Dr. Mur-
ray Banks"
®)ABC NEWS
«1:30 f) MOVIE * * * 'h "In Harm's Way" (Part
1) (1965) John Wayne, Kirk
Douglas. An out-of-commission
Navy man Is assigned to cas>-
ture important enemy-held
Islands. (1 hr, 30 min.)
8:00 8 ()) THE FITZPATRICKS
The festlvtt,.. ~mounding Max
Fitzpatrick'• Flnt Communion
are mamld when hi• tither II
au1pended ft'om hi• job.
Thalmua Ruulala, Donald
Moffat. Robert Hogan gueat
•tat.
***~ "Huth, Huth, SWeel
Charlotte" (1995) e.tt. DtMt,
OIMa de Havllland. A young
wom.,·1mind11 affected when
her married lover I• found
deed. (2 hra.)
9 SPECw.
"The Good Otd Daye Ot Radio"
Steve Allen ha.ts a notta.lglc
tribute to the ftrat 1ttty )'Mf9 of
broedcatlng. G PARENT EFF'ECTIVEHE88
"Letting Go" A dlscualon of
power. valuee and ,...pona&blll-
t}'_ ~ In problem tltuatlont-m MY THREE SONS
When Chip adopts a ltloolder
length hair-style, Steve decidet
not to be a strict lalher but to
give the boy more attention. ED OVER EASY
Eartha Kitt: planting bulbs: the
Senior Talent Opportunity
program; pollllcal power within
the community em GROWING YEARS
"The Child's Mind" (Part 2)
(J) CBS NEWS ®J MERV GRIFFIN
Guests: Bernadette Peters,
Sally Field.
7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 LIARS CLUB 0 ABC NEWS
0» I LOVE LUCY
"The Adagio"
Q) AOAM-12
Officer Reed ls assigned to
write a magazine article about
his partner. W MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT em EARTH, SEA ANO SKY
"Earth History"
Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:25 ED PLEDGE BREAK
AegUlarty scheduled program-
ming may be delayed due to
pledgf breaks
7:30 0 CANDID CAMEAA 8 NEWLYWED GAME
8 AMERICA SALUTES THE
QUEEN
Bob Hope wtll be Joined by
Julle Andrews, Rudolf Nureyev,
Yoko Moriahlta, Paul Anka,
Harry Belafonte, Cleo Laine,
John Oankworth, Shirley
MacLalno, Alan King, The
Muppeta. Rich Little, The
Brotherhood of Man and Tom-
my Coopef In a gala tribute to
Queen Elizabeth II celebrating
He< Maj .. ty'• Sliver Jubilee.
9 MOVIE *** "The Rold To Rio" ( 1947) Bing Crosby, Bob Hope.
The llVM of two mualctana take
• turn for the better after they
stow away on an oceen liner. (2
hrs.) DO HAPPYDAY8
"Bye Bye Blacicball" Richie,
Potsle and Ralptt are pledges
at the same fraternity, but when
Ratings Guide
IMovl.s .,.. •.ttld ~cordl"9 to llH
ofll<• ettfftCMn(• ~-lo• TV .,. Jud99d by un Ii< )
• • • • -Excellent
• • • -Very Good
• • -Good
• •. -Fair
• -Poor
8:30 U (ID LAVERNE I 8HIFU.EY
"The Stak*>Ut" The gk11 allow
FBI agent• to use tMlr epe,rt.
ment to ObMrYe-the llC1MU..
of a counterfeiter, not expect-
ing Carmine to be a prime
SU1P9Ct.
G) CROSS.WITS 8D OVElt EASY
Eatthl t<nt: planting bulb•; the
SenlOf' T1lent Opportunity
program: polltlcal pow. within·
the comtnunlty. •
8:46 D CONCENTRATION 9:00f)(J) M•A•S•H
An offtoer with a cold-b~
knack fOf' predicting cuualt ...
prompt• a violent reaction from
Hewkeye, white Chartea IUffera
embatrustng ,...,It• from con-
suming a gourmet reaat. a a THREE'S COMPANY
"Janet'e High SchooC Sweet-
heart" Janet lotea her oool
wtten the groovy campu1
Adonis Of her high tchool dayt
shows up for a date and Jac:tc
and Chrtuy ooneplr• to i.ave
them eJoM In the apattment.
G) MERVGRIFFIN
Gunt1: 8ernadette Peters,
Sally Field, Dody Goodman,
Cheryl Tleg1.
'9 MASTERPIECET~TAE "I. Claudius: Whet Shall We 00
Class of Vietnam
Jleterans Profiled on ABC Special,
By TO~ JORY
NEW YORK <AP)-"lfyouwerea
Vietnam veteran you were suspect,"
Ke n Oeltno recalled of his r eturn from
the war \n Southeast Asia. "There
was something wrooe with you,
m aybe"
Ken Dell no was one or 20 or so young
men from the Class or '64 at Chatham
Hl1h School in New Jersey who went
to Vietnam. •'People who didn't go to
World War It and Korea were the ones
who were strange." he said. ''In Viet-
n a m ·;t was the ones who went who
were strange."
Several or DeUno's classmates rt·
turned Crom Vietnam scarred or dis-
abled. one spent time as a POW -and
two didn't return at all.
Dellno's passionate commentary on
the plight ot the Vietnam veteran ls a
common thread running throush
"The Class that Went to War," an
ABC News Closeup acheduled tor
Thunday evening. The bour·lon1
documentary featurea DeUno and
several of his classmates.
effect of the war on a community with
which he was intimately involved.
"And the result was a kind of an-
tithesis of bow you see the Vietnam
veteran most often,•• be said. "It they
get coverage at all, it's usu~y of a
bunch of guys standing on a street cot·
ner complaining.
9:308 (I) OH!OAYAT A TIM&:
"Berber•'• Friend" Barbara
l>IY* a high price for klndnele
wMn a d~attly frlel\dly
clellmat• .-cMa °'It for help.
Scott Colomby gutet IW1.
(Pal"t 1 of 2». aa SOAP
(~ Elewn) Jeaioa tak• a ftrm 11and ag&lnat her phllan.-
deftng huaband: Corinne con-
front• Pet« abOUt his behavior,
Burt and Mary prepare tor a
aong.witlafpated ewnt. (Net·
WOf'k advlMe perwital dl1et•
Clon) e FILM$ OF PERSUASION
"MH!tlou9e" Emile O'Antonlo
crea*I thla fllm, Which )uxte-
po... well•....,Ched docu-
mentary footage of then Pl'ell-
dent Nixon wtth fictional, comic
film material.
10:00 fJ ()) LOU GRANl
The 1Ub)ect for Biiiie N.wman'1
Mt1ea Of llt1lclea le a frightened
end unwilling batt.,ed wife
(Julte Kavner). 8 NEWS aa FAMILY
"Laboura Ot l.ov•" An amo-
roue bou lady (Samantha
Egg•)dedd.etWlll~hutoo
much potential to remain an
errand bOy and the young """
1UddenJy ftnde hlmeelf pro.
moted and pursued.
• GET SMART
Agent 99 eccldentally discovers
that the le worklng1or KAOS.
G SPECIAL
"The Merry Widow'' Beverly
Siiia, Allan Tltut and Andrew
Fold! are featured In thl• pro-
duction of the San Diego
Qpeta.
10:158 NEWS
10'.30 G). NEWS
11:00888(1)9 NEWS e HOLLYWOOD
CONN.!CTION CJ MOVIE **'A "The Tall Women"
(1966) Anne Baxter, Marla
Perwchy. S.V.n women, the
aofe aurvtvor. of an Indian
m...-cte, attempt to reach
aafety. (2 tn.)
G) TitE ODO COUPLE
F.Ux plan• a aurprlae birthday
party for Oscar. Who loathes
birthday patUea.
ti) HONEYMOONERS
Allee and Trixie try to prove
that a Ml>PY marriage II doing
thl~ with their ml1blnd1.
11:30 f) Cl) CBS MOVIE
** "Night T«ror" (191~
Valerl• Harper, Riobard
Romanue. The lone wltneaa to a
highway ~troltnJn'• murdat le
r....,tlelelY pureued by t~ PIY-
chopathlo lclller. (R~ 8 TONIGHT
Hott Johnny C.-.on. Gueeta:
Dolly Parton, Eugene Fodor.
~· Wllllarn Nolen.
MORNING
12:00 9 TWILIGHT ZONE "The Jeopatdy Room"
-~FERNWOOO Elke oon1ldat9 .n affair; Sal
11xta brea.kfut for Cathy and
Penny: Wanda rMnwntt home movtea.
eMOVIE * * "King Of The Wiid Stalllon1:• (1859) Georgie MOl\t•
gomery, Diane Brewatet. A wid-
ow and her son are proteqted
by a wlld 1ta111on. ( 1 ht., 30
min•.) e OtCK CAVETT
Oueet: S.J. Perelm1n. numor-
flt.
12:30 e MOVIE
**~ "The lnvtllble Woman''
(1MO) Jottii ~Jr., Vlr-
Qb\la Bruce. Geng1tn attempt tit gain a ad«ltlet'a HCtet fOt
lnvtllblllty. (1 hr., 25 min.)
• MOVIE
**% "War Of The Wlldcat1"
(1843) JOhn Wayne. Manha
Scott. Two men ftQtrt O\W Oil
t1Qt\ta. (2 hrs.)
1:00 D TOMORROW
Guat: Henry Miiier, author of
"Tr09'C of C&ne*."
QJ8PY
s~ to learn that the ~adbnna portrllt they have
dattv.ed la a talc•, Kelly, Scott
and Katie Cammght concoct a
desperate ICMrne to OOfl'9Ct ,
thefr mll1a.kt.
1:111 e Cl) KOJAK ''Wher• Oo You Go When 'tou
Haw No Place To Oo?" A hot·
Ympend con.wctlon WOf1(tr
confront• a proaptctlvt
empfoyer, but ln~tly
kltll him In a fight. (R}
1:30 e MOVIE t ** ''The Public Affair" (1N2)
Myron McCortnlclc, Edward
Blnne. A cruQdlng Nnator I•
IW>fected to a vtetoue rurnor
C8mPa6Qn by a IObbytat group.
l hr., 30 min.)
1:3e NEWS 1~ NEWS 2:008 NEWS 8 MOVIE **'A "JOhf'lnyTrouble" (1951)
EU* 8arrymore, Ctctl Kela-
way. A woman contlnUel to
taarctJ '°' her tono-mtaino aon. (1 hr., 40 min.) 8 MOVIES
*** "The W041d In His Arma"
(1952) Gregory P9Ck, Ann
Blyth. A pttnceM falte In love
with a ... captain. b4.lt i. kid~
napped by a h...o prtnoe on
,
By JAY SllARBU'IT
LOS ANGELES <AP> -In receat ' years. this ton ftu fUled up with a ·
patrlate New Yorkers wbo work Jn TV
and constantly gripe you CQ't get
good com beet Ob rye ~-.ere ln Beverly Hills.
But Frank Gorabin, the lm·
preaslonist, actor, tomlc •nd 1lri1er. •
isn't one of them. la fact, efter Utinc
.. ere 2Z years, he packed up his f amUy
last Auawrt and moved to Greenwtch,
CoM.
Greenwich isn't tar from Fun Clty.
It'• mainly bJown as the pl•ce to
which New York adverUsln' ex·
eeuUves take the 5:40 train each ~e-·
nlns. lfthetralnlsrunnine.
Why did Gorshln, "3, mov6 out Eaat? '
Wedtae•dat1'•
Dagtlnte ltlovle.;
t:30D MQVI! **"' "Yankee ~· (195~ Jeff Chandler, Aantt1!
Indy. An Am.ican ehlp --"!:! ovt to <*troy the phtel of tbe ,
Spanlah Main. (1 hr •• 30 Min.) ..
10:00 e MOVIE * * * "Old Acqualntanct'! ~ (19'3) Bette Devi•,
Hopklnt. A IUOCtUful ~ ...
reunited 'Nfth her hUabarid ~.~
datJQtrt• aftW t9n ~~.~ eeparat)on, (2 tn.) ~
AFTERNOON '
12:00. MOVIE
***''Mlllsadte~ .. (1964) Joea. Ferrer, Rlt•
H•yworth. A~ woman .. a ~IM put becot1•
lnvotwd With • Matina end. ~ • minister on a Pacific llland. (t.
. tn.., 20 min.) 2.1)(). MOVll! •
··~"Night p ...... (19ffl . Jamee Stewlrt, Audie Ml#1)hy.
An outJftt ~ "" png
When theY hold up • ~
guarded by hlJ btOthet. (2 htl.l
3:000 MOVIE
*** ••oetow-To Nowt.rt•
(1972) ~ Peppatd, Qvt8'..
tine Bett~. An lnluranc>e ln~lglltor ftnda bo"' J>04'-and bU"'*-lnYoharnaot fn · tour murdert Md an arrncnd
truck robbery.(2 hl'I.)
a:ao• MOVIE \
**1A "In Name Ont(' (1989)1
M!ChMI CIJlan, Ann Premlte:
Three COUpM dltec>\W t~
.,. not legally marrted. (1 "'~
30 fT?ln.) \
f"Just because It's marked 'Air Mail' doesn't . j mean I have to fly, Marmaduke !"
F~KY WINKER BEAN
I
~
I I •
k'6u.Y, ~ ~ULP
,.-_ f 9"f Atrf A U11t1Z
10 A Giili, · !'Ve
N~V6tz M6f ...
•M"5. OR.116"1.
flool<, AL, (>JE. CAN'T REJECT fOME™I~& JU5T BE.cAU5!:
--~~~~~~~----.
IT'S DIFFERENT I , .
WE'VE GOT 10 REMAIN
OPEN At.JD RECEPTIVE 10
NEW IDEAS ! I SIR LCT'5
TR<J rr !
... Tf.v.T I HAD ALL
iHe S)'MPTOMS
OF BATTLE: F,ATIGUE
,AND SHELL S~~ ,,,r __ ,,.,.
GERIATRIX
l~~NOTIN
GOOP H&\L.n-t, ")CtJ
C'.aUL.DN'T ~l\IE
'THE &..-~SON!
GORDO
by Wm. '· Brown ind Mtl tasson
6He 2tl~5 A PEANUTS
.CAlU'fE ~i .
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DIS6USTINGI
-S~tJ6~1S i~8~"'
OR.SMOCK
t='OCT"OR PRetP, TH& WOMAN WHO IHINKS
SHe's SNOW WHl-re ~us-r CAt..W:?P ANP
SAIC' SHE! CAN''T COMB IN TOPAY ...
MOTLEY'S CREW
AAVE 4!'00 EVER GOTTEN
' A 60U> STAR, MARCIE?
by Roger BrlClfleld
by Ttmpltton and Forman ----------------.... Mtnf•l(tff'
t5A
ROCI< 6'.0AJP/
,. . ..
1 !I .. ,.
p
~ . .
i .
.. . . .
. . . • ' ' • .
' .
" ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ....
' ' l \ ._ , • i
'
Comedy Charms
You rnlght say that ''The Happy
Time~ ls the French Canadian
version of "You Can't Take ll Wit.b
You." Certainly the a.imllarltles at>ound
Samuel Taylor's mild little comedy
re m bles lh• inore noteworthy Kaur.
m¥·Hart classic in its depicUon of an
un~onventional fam1•y In the 19308.
Ariel the mini-crises which develop are
:.tit viat.ed by the paternal wl.sdom of
the head oflhe household.
The Co5ta Mesa Civic Playhouse,
whlch staged ''You Can't Take ll With
You" earlier this year, now has ''The
nappy Time" on the boards for one
more weekend. And while it won't
evoke the laughter of the ear her show,
yo will smile a lot.
'tHE PERFORMING duo or Clark
and Pal Burson head the Co:;ta Mesa
cast as the easygo-
ini. understandini;t ra lh l' r and his
s traight -laced
Scottish wife. Both
deliver strong,
., c n s 1 t t v e &"1~;...:;.:.:tt"
p~rformancc8.
Steve Howard 1s
fine as the rakis h
Unrle Dcmondc,
wtuk Fred Owen 1s
<·XC'C ll ent as the 1m-
b 1 b i n g U n c I c 1uuo1i
Louis. ~ho carries his wine around in a
W<tter tooler. Jack Conway could
make his foxy grandpa a httle more
spirited v.hdc Laurie Lambert is solid
111 lhc onl··di mcnsional role of Owen's
shrtw1sh wife
The n~w maid, who finds herself the
obJect of mu<:h affection, is nicely in·
t<.•rprcted by Victoria Schleicher,
while youn!! Brigitte Ohlig is engug-
tni.! as the ~1rl next door Two very ef·
rt? lnterrnlsaion ] ~ Tom Tltua .
son·ID·law and Dale Voss as U\e pu.aby
principal who aets has come"ppance
inlhclunnlestsceneortheplay.
BUT, FOR ALL intents and
purposes, the eve.nina belonas to
Heino Moeller aa the boy on the
threshold or puberty who undercoe.s a
memorable maturins process. YoWlg
"TtCll tCAl'f'Y TIMI"
A <omMY 11y :s.mue1 Tay~. dtnKtff by Pall,_
belllfll, ·~ Ol~IOI',,.. Amt1er.11r•mMttcl IOI' 111\61
petlotm-FtlOay -S.lu•O.Y al l ;al • lllt C..ca
MeW Cl•I< Pl•vi-te on the O••nee ~""'" F-w .. ouncu. Rntr••llons~S..s.ut.
TM&~T
P-Clark lkKMn
MMn• ... • .. Pat llunon
81bl. . • .. . . .. • . • .. .. .. . . ~lflO Moell••
G•anCllMt••· Jac:kGef>wey
U11<te De,,_ . .. • . ... ~•-MO Un<l•I..-•.. .... • .... . .••• f'redOw.11 . Aunt F ellce • . . . . . . . . . . • • . 4utla L.ambel1 MIOnotlelle • , .. •• • . .. VIOWle Sdlleiclw
S.lly ..... • • • .... , • 8'1QineONio Attreo . • ................... ..t-IOll'*'Wlll
Mr.hy1 ............................. 0.taV-
Moeller 1s highly effective and
naturally engaging in a most demand-
ing juvenile role.
Joe Amster's plain, uncomplicated
set Is just right for the family or
modest means in a Depression era.
Director Pati Tambellini employs a
light, almost casual touch to her p~
duclion which retains the play's
charm, it.s most crucial ingredient,
although the actors occ:asionally en-
counter difficulty with the twlstJ and
turns of the Frencb-na vored dialogue.
Final perJormfnces of "The ffappy
Time" will be given Friday and Satur-
day evenings at 8:30 in the Civic
Playhouse at the west gate or the
Orange County Fairgrounds.
* fl;ctivc l'ameos are turned 1n by John CALL.BOARD -The San Clemente
Epperson as the nervous would· be Community Theater 1s still looking for
--------------------an actor to take the
LA MJllAOA 4 • LAMEWOOO 4 WAlk 11< IA~O•>I" '~•Cl SI to ¥0fllf0A'f ttww SATU .. OAf t(.,c:.-ot ttohd•ytl U.>010$00
I.A MlllAOA 4 ONLY SU .. DAYS 6 HOLIOAYS 12 JO lo 1~
ONLY CALIFORNIA OAIVE·IH SHOWING STARTI DIC 14 • "CLOS£ EHCOOHTVIS OF fH( 3'd IClfllO. AT ~ACWIO "°5fCAAHS O..IY£·
IN, LAICEWOOO llll/O AT ROSECRANS
"'"'' W*nll e IAU Y '111.0i <N1;1 ~~ )AT1 hU e=~~:~~~UIMe
u..,.... .............
"4·2400
...... •'-
lll1S31·9$M
... ..,
·~ ltl/UM$10
......
"'-ll31$Jl·t$1t
"WMO ....
IOHY DIHflllD CHI fl\UI
THI DHP t"I
DIAM UATON
lOC*JNI JOI ... tOOOIAI (ltl
'"" SAIOI WM0 RU llOM OIACf (II
IO!!I1 NO ""'6U
A& '.-CINO • '"'"""* llflUI "WMO,.,.
IOHY Dll•Pt1LD1Ht ""' THI Dl ... (NI
OC-IUINI e ~ llNYP
OH 00Df"> ""' OUMIAU Ull Y CNI
inspector's role in its
next production, "Dial M
for Murder" .. audi·
tions for that assignment
will be held tonight at 7
o'clock in the Cabrillo
Playhow,e, 202 A venida
Cabrillo . San
Clem1nte ...
Tbe Stan Drew 's
Drama Guild or St. An·
drew's Presbyterian
Cl\urch will hold audi·
tions Thursday at 7:30
p.m . and Saturday at 10
a.,m. for the comedy
"ifr. Barry's Etchings''
at the church's Dieren-
field Hall, 600 St. An-
dUw 's Road, Newport
.84"acb ... Bill Fucik is
directing the show.
which bas a cast or seven
mel\, and six women. . .·
further details are
available at 642·6834 or
646-1535 ..
----~ ,,.,i~·f
IM\ t (. .. ,1 H•t c ......... ..._
CM.le.to GMlllW• . .. LAGl.AMDE
IOURGEOISP" f IJ
,,,,~
LESLIE CARON, CHILDREN JENNIFER, CHRISTOPHER
Now 45, th• Ster of 'Gigi' T•klno on More Mature Aeatgrunenll
Leslie Caron Moving
Into 'Mature'·Roles
OKLAHOMA CJ'l'Y
(AP) -Th re's nothing
unusual about Clarence
Nash's oormaJ voice.
But when h lwlats hla
ton1ue and ~uawkl, tht
80\lDd would be rec·
ognlzed around the
1lobe.
Nash. now 73 and re·
Ured, for 37 years sup-
plied the voice of Donald
Duck, wan1l>bney'sl~i~~!!i~iii .· tamolll" cartoon
character.
Nash began imitating
the sounds or barnyard
anlmata wbile a child on
the family farm In
nortb\vestern Oklahoma.
The duck voice was
created during the 19208,
when Nash was traveling
the vaudevllle circuit.
"I was in a musical
eroup playinc tho man-
dolin amd heard this eirl
slngln1 'Mar)' Had a Lit· tie Lamb' in a funny
way,·• Nash recalled.
"So I started to Imitate
that souna in the act."
During the
LONDON <AP> -Three years ago
Leslie Caron dlscevered she was 42
and had not.h.in& to do. "I was at a
turni,ng point in my life,'' she said.
suitable for the mother of two children
who are now a\ Cambtidge
University. Director Told
But the flair of the tctress ls there,
evident in the famous wide mouth out-
lined Jn flamboyant pink matching the soft folds ol a sweater cut low to show
oil a lanned neck free ot lines. The
firm chin and dancer's figure are
testlmontalS to the strenuous ex-
ercise the tormei-ballerina bas just
put in on summer stock staaes from
Tulia lo 1'ocooto.
"I could either turn to writing or
drinking. I chose the pen."
Miss Caron remembered that de-
cision while In London tor the world
premiere of her latest fllm, "Valen·
lino." a biographlcal extravaeanza
based on the life of the 1920s silent
screen lover Rudolph Valentino.
IN THE MOVIE that casts ballet
star Rudolf Nureyev in the title role,
Miss Caron portrays Alla NazJmova.
a flamboyant Russian -born
Hollywood mm star who chose Valen-
tino as her leading man in the 1921
produc:tion of "Camille."
''Nazhnova is a very excltlna.
larger-than·lire lady and naturally
I'm playing her like that,'• said the
French actress.
But the role also calls for a mature
"older" woman. The beautiful co-
quette or "Gigi," the simple vtuaae
beautv of "Fanny," and the innocent
ingenue of "An American in Paris''
now Cills that requirement w1th
mature grace and her own special
style.
AT 45, HER GREEN eyes sparkle
in a nest or wrinkles. In a fashion
season which has brought a French
haute couture revival of the "cute lil-
tle girl" look Gigi. made famous 20
years ago. she wears simple classics
.ur1.c1"0 crG1
"IOllYDIBAaD"
AL "ACIMO IP•t
"IOllY OUIFtll.D.. ,
It has been 26 years since Gene_tcel·
Jy spotted her dancing in ''The
Sphinx" in Paris and' made her a star
by casttne her in the lead female rote
of "An American in Paris."
BE& GAJIJN LOOKS and French
accent t~ast her for the next dec-
ade as an innocent pinafora-aftd.
pletails teen-ager who usu'-11>'
blossomed into a beauty surrounded
by beaux.
Winner ot two British FUm
Academ~ awards, ahe has been
nomh:iated twice for Hollywood's
equivalent Oscar. Dedicated to her
crlft but not a ala ve. io it. Mias Caron bas interspened the paat few yean
with wriUn& as well as acting.
"It took me a lone Ume to 1et m
front of a wh.ite piece of paper Md
confront it," sbe said. "I've fin.lsbed
two scripts, tried three, and oow I'm
trying to sell one. I'd like to dlrett a film . .,
VISALIA CAP) -
Actor Anthony Quayle, forn>er di.rector of the
Stratford Memorial
Theater in England, wiU
direct a Shakespearean
Th&iter being planQed
tor Ceotr!d Calitorn.ia.
•Horoscope
e
fery
Penny Davies sculpts astounding figures
with puff pastry shortening.
By JUDITH OLSON OI .. 0Mty ,..._ 5\llff
Penny Davies has never had a
painting lesson in her life or tried
her hand at clay but suddenly she
has blos!50med as an ar~1st m the
kitchen.
"I'm an Aquarian in my water,"
she said with a grin.
Mrs. Davies has discovered her·
milieu in sculpting astounding
figures with a very unusual
medium, puff pastry shortening.
Once a specialty or chefs like ice
carving, the art is dying out,
because chefs simply do not have
the time required anymore.
The shortening figures, unlike
ice, last for many months and can
be remolded when another shape is
desired. Puff pastry shortening is
much like cla~, Mrs Davies said,
but 1s more ' short" than normal
shorten mg
Her figures now decorate lbe buf·
fet table at the Marnott Hot.el in
Newport Beach and have been used
as a centerpiece for a special chefs• party.
Mrs. Davies discovered shorten·
lng figures a year aeo when she
stepped into a walk-In freeaer at the
Marriott and sa a Utt.le sculptured
bird. .
"l kept wanting to touch it," she
said. "The chef told me ft wu puff
pastry shortening." ,
She was so intrigued she bought
her own "grease" for $24 and went
to work at home one night.
Her first effort, a woman, waa
such a success that the chef asked
her to make more figures. Though
she bas done a few animals, she
usa11ly makes people, because
"ptople ll'i! my favorite thing."
She starts with a box of shorten·
in' 1thicb is wrapped much like but~r. After "globblng" it onto a
wooden support, she starts molding
it with her fingers.
•'I usually don't kaow wti.t I'm
golnc to make when. I start. My
guiding spirit does these. I call it
my 'Honey,• "she said, patting her
shoulder to indicate its presence.
Her "honey" is "God, of
Peggy Gene
Evans,
tar right,
in her college
tap-dance
:t:lass.
course," she conceded. "But tb.ls
makes it more personal."
Once the sculptures are done she
transports them by truck to the
hotel, which Is no easy task since
they weigh 40 lo 50 pounds each.
"It aJso takes a lot of mUJcle to
pack the shortening on," she assert-.
ed. "It's a lot of hard work."
Each sculpture costs around
$15·$25 and gives Mrs. Davis very
greasy hands. "I us~ paper towels
a lot," she said. "and then soap and
water. That's all."
When her artistic talents started
showing, Mrs. Davies was asked to
try decorating foods for the hotel's
luncheon and brunch buff4!ts.
She now J)uls vegetable nowera,
onion rosettes and carrot curlicues
on the various dishes with no
thought that her art wlll be
destroyed with the first plunge of a spoon.
Though she enjoys her job In food
preparation, Mrs. Davies Is ad•·
mant about the fact that she
doesn't like to cook.
"I just like to eat," she said with
a grin. "I never thouaht I'd be In the food business.·'
Her creativity is being manifest·
ed in othe~ ways, too . She has been
asked to be a reporter tor the
hotel's employee newspaper,
"'through the Porthole," and now ·
writes a column called "A Penny's Worth."
"When I say something nice
about people I call lt 'Penny Can·
dy,' "she added.
Like the flowers she deil&ns for
the Sunday brunch, Mn. Davies ls
opening up. From a person who
"didn't work much" and dreaded
going back into the electroAics in·
dustry when she had to mike some
money, she hu truly dllcovered her niche.
"I have peace," she said. "The
peace that pasaes understanding. I
really like my work. 1 like ~ peo.
ple. I can be mysel!."
Will she go on into any other
artistic endeavors? •1GOd willing
and the cteek doesn't rise.•' repUed
Mrs, Davies. "But I have no plans
for doing anything different right now.''
Above, Penny'
Davles#ulpts
a bust from
P!Jff. pastry.
a.chef and,
left, a knight.
)
Mrs. Evans, riqht, with fellow student Tracy Beauchamp, 27.
... Daneer
(From Page Cl>
that she's taking four classes a
week. Doctors had recommended
that she walk for exercise. an ac·
tivily she finds "exceedingly bor·
mg.
•'I decided to exercise with
music because music has been my
whole life."
She began dancing as a young
~1rl while living in a convent A nun
discovered her talent and at 10 she
turned proress1onal.
Traveling with an aunt she did
specialty turns and ballet dances in
musicals and Ught operas on stages
throughout the country.
SllE LATER DANCED m silent
movies, doubling for stars such as
Mary Pickford, Pola Negri, Nonna
Talmadge and Colleen Moore. She
also was the prima ballerina in the
Faust opera scene in "The Phan·
tom of the Opera" with Lon
Chane}
During the 1920s she started a
chain of Peggy Gene Studios in the
Los Angeles area. At least two stu-
dents went on to fame and glory in
the movies.
·•t gave Loretta Young dance
lessons." she says. "She was eight
years old and extremely talented.
She did the butterfly dance and
when she died in the end she really
died."
Judy Garland ana her two sisters
<then known as The Gumm Sisters)
also had lessons ln one of tho
studios. "Judy Garland wu very.
tiny," she recalls.
During World War J, Mrs. Evans
was appointed executive chairman
of the entertainment committee for
the 11th Federal Reserve Dlatrict
to promote Liberty Boods. As a re-
ward for outatandln1 bond sales
she became the flr:3t woman to Oy
in an Air Force jenny.
DURING THE NEXT world war
she directed dance revuea for the
USO in Soulhem California. Then
she got married, bad a aoo, and
hung up her dancin1 shoos unW
this fall.
.. 1 still seem to be Umber." she
says. "I'm eltjoylng it immensely.
Just the movement with the music
is pleasing."
While she's aware most people
wouldn't consider taklng up tap
dancing in their 80s, Mrs. Evans
says, "I don't feel there's anything
that youcan'tdo."
Whatdoberfnendsthi.J1k?
•'They're not surprl1ed at
anything I do," she lauihs. "They
expect the unusual every time I
meet them."
One friend, in a limerick com··
posed two years ago, 1eems to belt
aum up Peay GtMe Evans:
"She aays she's 81 years old.
What? With all that fire7 With all
respect. I do suspect the Lady la a
liar!"
The Almighty-
reieplione
Americana u.n't lnUmldated anymore by
autborit.Y. bl1 \Nslneas, or st.roocUDJont.
Butleta telephone rtq and•veeyWncttops.
On television the other nilbt. I wat.ebid a love
scene that wu IO torrid my klds suuestod I leave
tho room. M Uus coupl• hunrrfly clun1 to one
another, •huttlna out all reaaan and livhlf ••Y to
animal lust, the phone r1q. Tbe QlaD dropped tbe
womanllkeabadbabltand1atd, "l'U1etlt."
· 1 o seen war ~ovtel wbere mea will be
enia1ed In a full·•cale 'atUe for their Uva. Aa •
mortar shell& explode. tanks 1que1k alone.
artillery thunders. SUDJ crack a.od alr~raft soar;t,
a pbone wUl .rtna. Everyone hears lt and fieeie1 wltb anticipation. .,
Inatlnctively, one poor lnlantrJman "Wlll
crawlonhl.sstomacbfor500yards,dodlinlmlnea
and bullets to answer it. In one flick I •ctually
heard the guy yell down to a fox.bole, "Hey
Capt'n ... it'sforyou."' <Wouldnttheyfeelllke
a fool if it was a wrong num bet;?)
One evening when I was takinJ out the
garbage cam I was at the end ot tho drlff wben I
heard the phone riDI In tlJe house. lnsUncUve.ly, I
dropped the cans and u they rolledlntotbe•treot.
1 colllded wtth a carden bole ln the aaraie, 1plked
a small child. knocked over a kitchen chair and
called the liabt twitch an o~one name. Wben I
realized whomever bad hunt up, I saljl aloud, "I
don't know who you are, or where you are, but
someday, Mr. Three·ring.a-dlngs, we'll meet,
and wbenwedo, I'm goln1tofbtltaoyOW"tlnCers
will nevef'waDt through the yeDowpaiea acaln."
A few years ago, I discovered anotbentrange
phenomenott about the phone. Notonbt did its rin1
make our heart beat faster and brine us to our
feet, butt.bepboneal-.wayslmewwhenwes•tdown i-
to dinner and alerted ever;onewtthln our radius. I
tried rattling dlahes around 4 tn the afternoon
in an effort to tool it, but tho phone wu too smart.
Itran1on.tywbenwentdowntoeat ..
· We made a ,utay stand. We decided not to
answer the phone durtn1 the dinner hour. That
night we sat at the table for '5 minute. durtng
whicbtlmothephooedldn'trin1once.
Finally, I grabbed the phone and called tho
operatortofind out what was wrong.
You see? The phone even bu waya of makin1
you t.a.lk!
Club CGUndar MW each Wediwldolf jn the DaU11
Pil-Ot and contama notkt• oJ ioorn.n'• Giid 1nvice club.
meetlngl and twrlt• for IM f °"""1fllQ 10ftk -Tlnm·
day throuQh WtdneadoJI. Send noffcu to Clad> Coln·
dar, DaU11 Pilot, P.O. Btn 15«1, Cotto Meta, CA nai.
Be wrt to mcludt JIOU1 narrw and pllOM munM.
Notica muat ~in our btmdl hoo 1Dftkt bl adoc:mct.
To requnt o p6cture, ~ or call tM Feotw11
DeparttMnt. fa..4m. Pfcturn ore limited to Jvnd·
TaUm OJ)tn to Uae pt.lbUc.
( .-Boros~ope J Too Much Loving?
22·Dec. ?ll: Excellent
lunar :.ispert coincides
now with travel, im·
proved communications,
sp iritu al values,
scns1 t1v1ty to moods.
Cancer. Leo and Ana
Landen
crawled u:ndet tbe table
and were going at lt bot
and heavy! They bad
thelr cfothes on but.YOU·
wouldn't have known tt.
Your oplnlOI\ la wanted.
-GR~OUT,
DEAR G.: Uw1aat , ...
report 11 aeeon~ I A&·
•est yoa take yoar com·
plalla&a to Cite prlaclpal.
S•cll bellaYIOI' •• of.
feaahe and tbe 1pec.
taton Qoaldn't. bave to
pa&uwtlblL
To avoid di1appoint· mcm, pn>aptCtn>e bricU•
are ren~ to bcN thftr
weddblg atorle1, \OUh a
black4d'1Dhil• 111oul/ oJ
the bride ar oJ Vic ~. to CM Fecduru Depart-
ment one wuk Nfor• the
~. .. £ngogftMfll cut~e·
"''"''· 1Dt1h block·afld· t.Ohlte 0'°"11 of tM fuhre
brtde or ~ c ... muit
bt rec•foed bu th•
Featurn Dtpcu1mmt If.%
weeka bf/or• CM ~ dal•. ,
• ERMA BOMBECK/ ANN LANDERS "
. . .. Nutritionist
(From Pa1eCU
Coods, few canned or proc·
esaed foods. The more lt'1 proc·
essed the fower vltamtns tt has."
Ma. Mooaero emphasbet that
there are no euy anawen to beau·
ty, whether tt be balr, nsure or
I ace. •'It takea Ume and effort," she
stressed.
WORKING FOR A beauty salon
Is a poulblllty that excites Ms.
Mon aero tremendously. She baa·
been in ptlvato practice in the San
Marino area and worked for
Colorado General Hospital ln
Denver, but prefera a more
positive job than the hospital.
Sho became interested in nutri·
tlon as a young student. "I was
like every othet' woman-worried
about my health and diet. I used t.o read up on it . .,
Her background was aood
because her mother ·'used to cook
good meals," she said, so she has
always been in the habit of eating
basic foods.
In her privat.e practice in San
Marino abe worked primarily wtth
overweight people and she an·
ticipates that her cllentele •t the
salon will involve the same.
Ms. Mongero feels that her work
also includes a lot of re·educaUoo
since many people learn bad
habits in childhood.
"You Jearn from your environ·
ment," she explained. "You aee
commercials on TV for all the
crunchies but there are no tom·
mercials for fruits or veaetab1es.
"NUTRITION JUST now is being
tauaht in schools," ahe aald, which
is ''just a 1tart. It's a field that 'a ft.U·
ly unexplored."
Ms. Mongero plans to teach
classes as well as do personal
counseling. Sbe uses behavior
modification techniques a lot and
says she has been very succeaaful
with them.
Dieters usually fa\l because of
unreallstic 1oals, ahe believes.
"They think tbey can lose 10
pounds th.is week and it will be
cone. Tberu la a lack of erton t.o
really aet down and commit
themselves t.o do Ute work. Most
people think there's a maaic p1U to
take."
She also said Ulere are a lot o!.
myths about food. ''P~P,IO thlnk
carbohydrates •r• bact but ·yet
lhe,y eat 20 ounce& ot meat. The
ldeal waty to lose ts to apare pro-
tein."
She declined to comment on tho
serlous problem encounte ,.
cently by women ho have predleest~ llqutd ~l'Ot.oin fot dlttt.
say Ina that she doesn 't have
enough WonnaUon.
She does use ap clally
formulated proteJn powder.1 fOf'.
women who ~t want to lGle a few
pounds, however, and advoca'611
behavior modiftcation for thereat.
"If a person ta very much over-
wei1ht it'• not fl-Om just a wee~· ot bad eating.•• she asae~:!i "They need to substitute
habits for bad."
She has her clients keep a reeord
of when they eat and bow they feel ·
when they eat. t.o try to establish
patterns. Each problem receives a
specially tailored answer with the
client t.akini charite.
•'It •s a very involved process that
doesn't center around food," she
said. "Il centers around wby you
eat, not what you eat."
The motivation for loslni wellbt
"has to be within the person/' Ma.
Mongero emphasized. "I can help
a person by giving them ideu and
recipes but it has to basically come
from within.
"That's true of llf e in general,
not just tn losing weisht.,.
She finds that many ~le come
to her "after all else falls.' That lb·
eluded the mlddle·a1ed woman
who waa tired of not bavina ·her
clothes rrt and her husband making
remarks. A specially taUored diet
and an lnteme desire helped the
worn an take off 30 pounds.
Dieting doesn't have to be dif.
ficult because eatfnl ri1bt la almp.-
ly not hard, the lrviDe resident em·
phas1zed. "It d<>e1n't ~u.lre a lot
of time or money. Peopl4 ahould
just take the Ume to eat good food ...
and IOok your best .
for the 9'olldays!
•ACNE •WRINKLES
• DRYSKIN • iLJNES
•BLEMISHES • OLYSKIN
MON-SUIGICAL •••
/ace liftmg can ,_gin
with your first vfaitl
c.,_.....__,IOllTOOAY
£~
SKIN CARE' CENTER
I • ti .. •
.. , .. ,,
PU1lUC N&l'ICE
•',
I
i
J i~
SA1'80t4AL VllW why not be a
neighbor to the s una.et with thia
<)CEANFRONT duplex ? You can live
lA one wut of this modem home while d1 riving income from the other.
Nature has landscaped your dream
home with a sandy beach and the
BLUE PACU'IC at your dooratep. We
will be happy to arrange a private
showing for you, cal 64CMl61.
WALK TO SCHOOL -grades K
t.hrough 12 trom this comfortable,
family home in move·in condition
thruout. 1''eatures 4 bedrms + 11xl8
family room. Remodeled kitchen with
new range and micro·wave oven and
spuch more! Sec and try to match it at
$19,900. Ctl 546-4141.
Serving Costa Mcsa·lrvinc
Huntington Beach·Ncwport Beach
~~~ .......... !~~~,~~~~ .......... ~~~
PENINSULA POIMT
4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities.
Lovely area, few st eps to beach.
$189,500
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4
baths, hving rm. w/cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950
llG CAHYOM
4 BR, f am. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra
large lot. $325,000
BILL CR UN DY, REALTOR
3·11 Buy~•d" Q,,,,.., N 8 67) 6161
Real Estate GeMra1 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
associated
OU1)._ lW'. 0(/'HT(JJ'~
Jo f "" ,, tib I I I. I I ,,,,, •
llMITIRll. llt411MGTOH
That is the J)eane llbme 5 bedroom
model.. .and this one it beautifully va-
cant! With new carpets. paint, drapes
and and that squeaky clean feel.
Presented ot $146,500. .
UflllilVUI: li()Ml:S
REALTORS•, 676·6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
Jlso tn Mesa Vef'de, at 546 5990
I • I 1002 o ... , .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
$HHHHHHHt
JUST USllDI
Another great HarbQr Realty ex·
elusive in the original Bluffs. Quiet
corner location. beautifully de-
corated. 4, Bdrms., spacious tile
patio -you 'II love to show it off.
Call to see. $174,500.
673-4400
••
1001 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
WA & FHA ATURICIY
Great Starter
POR THAHKSGIVIMG
An F.aatiilde Co11tB Meta fixer upper, Ownet says Immaculate home, one sell as la. Brin& any of· of the beat buyer1 In fer. Hurry! Hurry I Colla Mesa. Laree lot, ~2Sl3 au~r 3 bedroom home, Dl'l1<1&9 •1IH1.mr >1i1-. •
covered patio eatlne [ '=oc r1 ~!*.:~~~:~ 111U
•
SUPER HACH IUY
7.59·0811
'fH[ REAL :
_E!T_~l'E!l~J
~ Wal km & I Cl!
Real F.lt•t•
N w Condot, l Br. 2~ Ba, 2 rrplc'1, ceramic tile ldlc:hens le bath. PoOI fl !Pl· 87M9L2 Broker
GUIMllOOI UAUTY
V ry attract.lve 3 bdrm,
frnlY rm home oo a cor·
ner. Popwur Hampton rnodtl oo a quiet 1treel. Frml din rm. CIOM to So.
Coast Plaza. C.11 now for
appt. to IH tbl1 lvly
home. 5(5.INtl
c;:I Walkr.r G lt:t:
.. v.~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
Uke new Collete Park ' Br2ba, pool $19.900 by ownr. Ptlo ont1642-W
SPYGLASS HILL HANDVM·~ .... 5 Watch sunset over ·I , """
Catalina, New Bedford DREAM HOME Model., S/6 Br. 2 aty, F I l finest view atrtet. Agt. antaet c opp0rtun ty 640-90'l5 Cor the buct)tman seek·
---------• lng a tarae worklbop at OLO CDM home. Bii aeparate
DU"-D bulldln1 in back suitable for mechanic, wood
2 BR In front & 1 BR In worker, el.ctridao, ot
rear. beau1lfully re·doni T?? Better bun')'! Call ~.
FO~t:ST F
OLSON ·-.
Wltelc'1n
9itAl 1\1.UI
I /SID&
COS'l'AMISA
HOLIDAY .
DINING
ln tbi1 beau,Jtul
Unlvoully Park 3
bedroo1n home has o formal~ room j"5t
ritbl tor the holldaya.
One yeu old and orters S72,000
3 Bedr"'. huae lot Complete with hurdwood
Ooor, dbl ~ar, covered
patio " qwet. fitreel. Out or state owner needs Im· mediate sale. Super buy
hurry! Call 546-5880
----''------1 aep&rate tamUy room, 3
baths llnd separate laun·
dry room. 2200 sq. n. of
elegant upgrades. 2
doors to pool and spa. A areat VIEW oflhe moun· Uans from the Oak und
'nle kitchen. Aakine only
Sl.34.SOO. -~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
FIXER UPPER!
Use your 1maalnallon'
With paint, curpel &
some rlxin' you con turn
FOREST E
OLSON
1.L. ..... ,,in.
BRAND MEW!
(SeablwffJ
l!nder u heavy &hak~
roof, surround(•d hy
wood frncin~. lt11s daul
mJ: new 2 story beauty m ( 1flr.o1 1 ti MARINA lflGHLANDS ~tm 11;.jl[JUHJI
hai. J bt'flrooms .<2 with Heal ~late
partial ocean view). 3 ---------
baths. vuultl'd .l'l'lhn.:s $158 500 gOrlll'OUS Slone f1rcplaCl', t
formal dlnin~ room' A Dl•anc home-Univ.
N i-: W • 11 o M t: Park "Kcnsinl(ton" mdl.
NE I G II BO It II o OD • w pool. Jacuzzi & u1r
rRICE SLASHED
Your own condo on the
water. 8 tennis courts,
pools, spa and gym. This
l bedroom .starter home
can be yours for only
~.900. Just reduced for
qwcksalc,
LOOKING FOR
LEASE/OPTIOM7
.
HIGH IN TUE SKY. 3
Bdrmt. • den. fantaalc ocean• dty views I Xlnt
Df'ilhborbood, CIOH to •tbool1. See today at
si•,500.
LARGE 4 bdrm., family borne. El 1'0«"0, close to
schools & shopprng.
$112.500
S89.500. Cstm pool dcckmi:. 2250 REAL ESTATE s4. ft. M1n1 ·lilinds
thruout. corning cook· RANCH HOUSE IA jQuail ~ tofJ stove. lush utr1um, Plac. , auto. sprinklers & lites 1--------•I 1-'!I acre w1lh ' llolt ms • 2 ----baths, hardwornl lloor:. & Prop11rti-· ,_Ow_nr_A-=-gt_._540-4 __ 64_5__ WAU4UT SQUARE fireplace. Please call for
• 752·\920 OHMYGOSH Al BR 2 b •· further details. 1400 auA1l11. .... ~, ""'" tr. J .. a • .,. sew. Fee land. New carpeting ing rm. Central air.
just installed. Well local· Cov'd patio. Many ex· 1104So. Coast Hwy. COLLEGE PARK 4 BR 2 ed. 4 BR., 2l'I ba., fomily tras! $66,200 LAGUNA BEACH
Ba. newly dcocorat<'d, rm. home, only $109,9:;(). EVELYN COPELAMD 497-2457
new cprt" & dr()!t. SIW.500 Wow! REAL TOR 55z.0434
546-8477 Agt. FINE HOMES ~!'.'.~~!. ... !~.~.m Rl!lB Edinburg ~=:~:=::.=:::
TIBURON At ~ Model 4 s.a. s119,soo.s1ss,ooo HANG YOUR 3 Bdrms .• 2~11 ba., ram. (389}
LIDO SANDS
Nice 3 br home. l blk Lo
bch. Lots or decorator
IOlarian & even your own
jacuui. Offered at
Sll~~· PUU8l REALTY
546-0114
ca Coldwell Bonk<.•r
SHARP 2 Sly Trl-Plex,
a1l 2 Br. $89,500.
OlITSTANDING Duplff,
2 sty, bdrm ~ al.90 acb 3 Monarch Bay Plaza w /frplC?" 1 ~ bL $10tO(IO.
Laguna Nlauel
NEWPORT BAY 496-7ll2 ll 1..0J36 8or16 UNITS, new paint,
TOWERS CON DO Sl.92.000. Good O.C. in·
On the Bay lu Balboa. lg 1i".......,_ 109. 0 comearu.
1 Br, ad u Jl s, po o 1, --USA REALTY l46"0507•---------• Marina. boat slip, securi· .. ••••••••••••••••••••••
ty bldg. $99 ,soo. ------.. -1 IS,.oOOWM Ownr/Agt675-7520 OPIM DAILY 1~s 4+plex. Seit area O.M.
OCEANAIONT 111m FURLONG OT. Income $1025,; $U0,000. 5 New Custom Homes Ait. 6'2-1312
Lovely 3 BR, 2 bath with aaun• 4' jacuzzi. ,_...;;--------•
furnished beach house From 3400 to 3600 sq tt. DUPl:EX_..IW
7106 W. OCEANFRONT Priced from $249,000. Ia Newport Helshtl, an
Only S277 .ooo W•; f; owt tto.n wibeUevable 2,000 sq, ft.
CAYWOOD 63f·t400 ' per a bedroom, a11a bath REALTY INC. • ••·•ito • C hrtltMas Stocking rm .• In Village II. Ex· »'·"~··~ ';.tlt~~~. cellenl location for the
1
~"'ji
In this super family entire family • close to 1--------· home in Turtlcrock. parks·scboola·library.
Poolsi.ee lot 'With tll0,950
sprinklers. Center
atrium. Like new carpet.
LOCATiOMI
LOCATIO ... I
-~_!»-HERITAGE
. . REAUOHS
' . 111 ', 1 I
Ul.~:.>UN
' t
New 4 BR, 2-aty., mt, RJOUS 2 1ty
VICW.~lbcllltpd. M> pel11 • runt 3+ study, (rpl,
~ ~93-481!. :~~pd.
............... ,Jt4-9. ~ ....... .................... 1)191 :!hr;L: H.1111 aded
Oakwood 2 Br aph & 3 br
Garden Apartmer\ts t.ownhouae. Adult& dls.-hwaaher. Gu Pd. 778
....,_..._.,,..,... ScoUPL MWO'IJ
880 Irvine cat l7thl Cozy 1 br w/ frplc. Quiet,
64S·05SO great JocaUoo. No peta,
WM.1110 llAClt twnbae, blin:'f.ici 'd 3Bdma.~phwlarst ~~.Sama. pool, fenced" 'iifd. Only on~ Jae. Wii k> heh. e mo, 18
block ~o tbe bucb. mo lie. lif75 mo. M30 nio adult&. $230. ~ ~/mo. JWRRY tC&l1 w/Ot4.1ar. 540-4480 .....,_. .._.,,S..... * 49A 0057 * 1700 16th St. NEAR HOAG. 2 Bdrm, ""rV Blu(fl''coodo, 3 BR, 2 ba, (Dover at 16th) c hlld OK, no pets.
P-eruna-. -W.a-Pt-. -W-A.Lk--TO-• xl11l~~~fi, 642·8170 Growid level.&,-lio, fncd BEA~ ff & 8 A Y. 3 =-ri:und i:; :v~'. Br+tiiil..rw+si~ Z~ NWPT. Shores, walk to Relri1 option. owner
b a • $ i ' 5 I m 0 • bcb, HO pets. 2 br, den, 2 pays water " trHh (21.3)3'2·9"12l~Uect baM5.548-3U7 BACHELOR APT. $*)/mo. 796 Shalhnar, ~In Weatcllff TIHMIS & HACH Apt 1. Open house 8 to •
CcndollvtniatltabaUn 3 Br 2 Ba Newport ALLUTILSPDl _daU_y_. _____ _
this bU1 & brl&bl2 bdrm en. b • 1 100' from the ocean.
2 balb end w:dt wlht'ie~ .. uo:: Is 0J:!r•3ew Y Semt.rurnl1bed. Avall NEW B.ACK UNIT. Frplc,
frplc, bltna 4 l~ra :!°940-2981 · $S50 nowl201E.Bal'°8Blvd. DIW.ibr.2ba,dbl1ar.
stora&e specie. _.. l)el' .i Yrly. $2SO per mo. NO $350. 1m Santa Iaabel,
mo. Anll Now. Pool 4 br 1 ba tam rm 3200 FIE. Call~ Sue at ~.•IL
ulill••d '.b7 oal~ 12 '_-:'J..~..,..1111.'•---... ·N 8 ~-~~77tll~an~ytl~JDe~·~~~l2 Br w/1arade, $2C5. ownenl JtO.INt Wallllet 911A_.._.._, ' ' 9; .._, _ "-aJ ..._._._ IDO 541.5032 Crpta, wat.r Pd. 2178 ........ ._ ~ -:-:--:-.._i.;.....::'-:""'~--.... -------•I .. B" Placentia. Call ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;& OCIAMROMT betwn H, 636-4120 Mon·
3BR,2be,Jrly. S.WS Fri
SlW$TO llACH FOURSE.ASONSAPTS
I Bk. l bat nty PlO Spadous 2 br &4Wnbae.
IBB, 1bl,)'!VP71 l~ ba, "podl, pvt patio, •m. ebUd ot. t:n5. 115
Joann st. 841ec83
SEND CHRISTMAS CARDS
VIA THE DAJI,Y PILOT
Ma~ed anywhere in the U.S. for $1.00
Send your Chrl•tme• me-ge to your
loved one• -write, type or draw your
card or we wtn ••t It In print for you.
Sampl" are ahown below. Actual •In•
•re 1%" x 3" for $10. 1%0 x I" for $20.
3y," x 3" for $20. Add $1 .00 to the cqst
and we wlll mall a complete paper to
your loved onea. Your Chrtltma• Carda
will •ppear on December ..... For more
Information or to order your card by
phone pl••H c•ll our Chrlltmae card
Ad·VIMr at 842-5878. Or JOU mar bring
or mall your card to Dally Piiot Chrlatntaa
Card, 330 W. Bay St., P.O. BOx 1580,
Coate Meaa, C•llf. 9282e. Chart• It or
u1e Maater Charge or BankAmerlcard.
HOLIDAYS
to the
HAPPY
Dear Aunt Liz: GRIG~~ in Virg1n1a
frolll the whole gang
of folks
In eosta Mesa
ACTUAL
SIZES SHOWN
I
I
I I ..
Schools and
Instruction
MICROWAVE
COOKING CLASSES
ST ARTIHG HOW
Personel lnstruct•ons
Complete Selection
Microwave Acc9'sor1es
Now oflennO 1pec11hzed courses
• Mellk• • P..ty '°9dl • a..w c.1wte ei..... st.t s....
•Ca....fer....-,MHh
"Learn to really u1e your ••oens1ve
Investment " We teach every ohase of
MICROWAVE COOKING
Complete 1•-; Hour -
3 Week Course
,.,. ..... .,, ltrf~
c• 7'8-so11
MICROWAVI! MAGIC
~OOKIMCi SCHOOLS
BEA
TRAVEL
AGENT
Day & Night Classes For
Meri & Women
PACIRC TUVB. SCHOOL
6 I 0 .... I 7tti Street, s.t• AM. C. tl70 I
CALL 1714) 543.9495
Estabhshed 1963
Financial Aid Programs
Accredited By The Accrediting Comml$S1on of
The National Association of Trlde & TechnlC&l
Schools.
TUTORING
IN •••
English Language Skills
Reading
(R~medial & Speedreadinf)
6r1nmar & Composition
Grades 3.f2
Fw ........ w .... att. c•
Robert Scanlon 4U.3463
••r 'P•rt••r' laf or••ffH r•t•r41•t
....... of ... .,..., ...... ~ ...... sc.--. _, ..,...,._ Da. ecto.r
Call .642-5678
Ext. 325
International Montessori
Schools
Chllclc ...
ZthN IOyean
Pl.AHMED PllO'iRAM
~o.,c ... 1 .. ,,..
Aho, Mak&: Dmdllg
Y•'re wek .... te c ... i. w ,_..
979.9z41
20221 e,,..... St, s.f• AH .........
MOii mAN JUST A JOI
BEGIN A CAREER
f AaALS & MAKE UP
Let Richards Beauty College help vou atrrt
developtng new skills• a Coemettolen. After
only 20 w"ks you can be earning a good
living.
COSMIETICIAH CL.ASSIS HOWi
Umited Enrollment-C.11 Now!
Top instructors give Help and Guidance.
Plenty of Practical Experience, Too.
TUmON PAYIN&
PROG«AMS
AVAILAILE
PLACEMENT
ASSISTANCE
MANY OPPORTUMmlS:
•Interesting Work
• Pet10nal Sat11tactlon
• Seeurity-Job9 not tied to economic situation.
• You progrese rapidly to become thoroughly
skilled.
• Seff..mplovment Opportunitlee.
CALL 962.Ul I FOil
lt«JOllMA TIOH
~TCHAJtt15 SEAUTY
COlLE'1"E
........... ,.uur
19060 • 1 I I .. , H a l\itf• IMA ..
VacaHo.. lteMGtt 425 eRetthll 4400 OHic.1...w 4400 ................. ••••••••••••••••••••••
)fate seeking M /F rm
mate 20-35 to share ha
on Pen. 1173-5553
AVOID INCOMPATIBLE
ROOMMATES I
Houle-Mat.a 132-4134
Takes Tbe Guuaworlt
Out of Findinl 'l'RAt RIGHT PERSON
S... SS by Sbr*J
M/F to aha~ 4 Br, 2 ba ~. C.11.. $150 lncJ uW. a.ma keep trytni.
g ll fl Wh1tl.' lfr.dl \'I
/'Kii l~t "'P' ,, fl,;ol 1411
If l •l' I,,' '1 •\ ... \I' ---
....,.,.. Air 4..-c ..... ....... ~ '"'~ ... ..., .... LIARNTOFLY
$105
CS2JS 00 0.-1
•PM APHOYID•
Courae lnctudH;
35 Hour$ fllgl\t time In Cesana 180 1 with 20
hours dual 1n1tryct1on. lndlv1dtJal ln1truetlon
tailored to YOUR lt>fllty. 38 Houra Ground School.
20 AJICUl'T A YAIUILI Al' ~OWIST ltATIS IM OU .... COUNTY
&.Nrw .. ftyMw--4-.MI
...
THEO VERLYN
STUDIOS OF
'VOCAL ARTS
Acting Fundamentals
& Stage T echnlquea
Beginners.classes for Singert
and Actors
Learning Problem? ,~ \l-IAl4 _
• dlallke achool or learning '--
• feel Ilk• 1 failure • bjch1veomp
00
e cro.,nfadetuMd easily ~ • • leern 1lowly ' • deydream In .chool / .-: \
WE CAN HELP
•READING •MATH •GRAMMAR
e STUOY SKILLS
GET YOUR PROBLEM HANDLED HOW1
l ...... W...t.4
For I Is 91eu o&dl. Ulb\
b0uekeepla1. ·Tues.·
Wech.·Tllan .• z:ao to f:IO ln llbtlon Viejo.
$30/..-. References re· q&bed. Ci.ll UT.-,_ '
aAbya!Uer~ Uve in own apt. at bcb. plus f'O. p/wk. FuU clm1• al cblldnli 1 A f. Sl•ll~r aoa·••oker. Dal anve. f73.ll51
BABYSJ'JTEI\, my C.M. . bocii .. lloa-l'l'l. ~
or 5t0-328IS •ft. s
1' r y .1 1' J ii ) I' I I 11 I
l'IJ1Js1ficd J\«iJ l_u bu,\ • "t•ll
Ill' 1·cnt somcth1ni.:
lookkee.,.r F /C
l'Ji,h hi 10\ t'"I 111t•nt
llrm Xlnl oppor t-;, , ... :r
& matunty rc4 d Ca II
1>40·012:!
llOOKl\1'.:EPEH .. C
P ·hme, 17th & 11 \IOt
Newport Ueach. ti 12 l.!52
< 'lt•neal
PA,JtT·TIME
1 llrs momlni.: Mou thru
l-'r1. Reif:. I) pin.: S!i +
v.pm. \.ranscnbing t'X·
pt·r helpful Willln!: to
train. Apply Natio1\.1I
S~·11tems <.:orp • 4:SGJ
Birch Sl. NH tNr OC
Airport) EOI-.:
Immediate opening for J
L1erk m our warranty rt•
pair department. Mui1t
type 5$wpru. illllpccllon
olinooming andoul14oing
items. filing. vhorics
l'lca:.e apply m 1wri.on
to
... " ..... ...
. I
___ .,......,....,_....., __ ~---
REAL ISTATI llOKRI & SAUS
We have an operung tor o men with
experience in commercial & invest·
ment properties. Wesley N. Taylor Co.
is a 32-year--Old firm owned & operated
by its founder. We are not a sub·
sidiary, divtsion or branch of
something else -just beadquarters.
Applicants must possess highest pro-
f ession-1 qualities & integrity to
match our own. Interview by appoint· mentonly.
WESUY M. TAYLOl CO,. ltlALTOlS
2111 S.J ...... H•._.
MIWPOU CIMTU. M.I. 644-CtlO
t·
11
, . r.
·Seaatreu watited, ex-
Tll£PHONE
SALES
~ -
I
t
J
-
~ -
\'OUR
. VNIJSED
ITEMS
C011LDBE
BOMEONE-S
(JIJUBl'JIA8
-
I
.
~
•• ortlals.
llzeact
onlY1 $7.50
.
... Sb ... '°'° .......................
bt le RV Storqe spaces
nail. -mo. Newport . Daes, llSl Baclt BaJ
Dr.N .. Deb MW510
HARWICIC DAT ~UH
r ' ' I
!.iJ f . I JJ r; ·M J. J J 7 '>
WE BUY
CUANCAIS
•TRUCKS
TOP
DOLLil
PAID l"OR CLEAN .. ..
~;:1
' II t t, t I •I w I
I 4 I t f , ~ ' • •' I I I :, ' I'
1' ; • r• • ~ f I •
--
CREVIER
I $f A llOAOWAY
SANTA AMA
835·3171 ~:O.f;. 'f~rtr.Y(~t::
m ar,1cle
n1clLda
' .,.. ~
1HtUl.TlloUflOIWV MA~ Cal117Mll2al\er6pm.
•USEDIMW1s•
77 530! upd ZISSEU
fT1320ia S/R 1nRSK
'7UOUl•pd SIR 401PDP
• '77 320l 4 ap 013RTP
19750ATSUM
1210
4 speed, radio • heater. 'Jbla Z door model is In
eacell•nl condition. --~~~.....,.,......,,~-c
16530iA SIR 7l2PQM • Cao..ct o. 5-daya ,, ______ _
obHGICOUMTY'S
~
Salea·Service-Leaslng
RoY Cm-Yer,lnc. ~la ftoyce BMW
15'0Jamborce
Newport Beach 640 6444
MISSION VIE JO IMPORTS
...... 1 •• \(,, 1 ••••• ,. ,., ., . ~ ,.. .. ~. . '
BJl -1748 49S.1104
BARWICK DA TSUM
~.tit .lu.111( .11•1:-.l1.a11••
831-1375 493.3375
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
Renwhtlng 1977
Ho•• Got To Go!
(313NBY>. ~......._.._ OMLY$Z695 ..__.... __
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2.IW5llARBOR BLVD.
540-64. 0 140-021 J
1975DATWM
l-210COUPE
2 Door. 4 1peed trans. Cc
low miles. In nceUen condition! <mNDN).
MAICEOffBl
'87 JAGA20 auto. air, di.sc
brke:.. xlnl cond. $4500
1168 19ffli
'64 Ju~ X K 1-; Hoad!>Ler
llardt11p \\lr<'s. ~800 ur
l>c!!I 55:! 0511;, t'Vl's or
-.kndi.
. 'Ja ti~OD
AWOmat " 6 1lr cond. For th• )UlOU')' of •
Msreedet & tho efrtcien· cyot a elesel. (834ElE).
'71Ml%210
SEDAN. Tobacco browo
• in immacwate condl·
tlon. t229MfW), Muat
Re to appredat~.
Mowo.ty $9''5
CLOSED SUNbAYS
RR '76 Sliver Shadow,
xlnt cond. 21.000 mi ,
custom sunroof.
Blaupunkt radio &
cassette + 8 track quad
Wood steering wheel,
driv1oa lights. $38,900
PP. 714-675-3627
Toyota 9765 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COSTA MESA
DATSUN KGm!ann Ghia 9735
IEFOREYOU
SEl.LYOUR
TOYOTA,
See us ror a top dollar
cst11nate' 2845HARBOR ALVO
540..6410 540-021 l
NEWPOkT DATSUN
•••••••••••••••••••••••
·73 Ghia l'pe Slick. Xlnt
cond S24!t5. or best ofr.
·1!~1 l130
MARQUIS TOYOTA
MISSION VIEJO
831·2880 495-12 l 0
'77 Toyota Corolhl. Dix '71 Clearance Mcnda 9738 exl, i.tndr'tl ant. 2000 mi.
L>cmo & cxcc11ll\" ~ah•••••••••••••••••••••••• l'all 546 5744 evvi. now going on hu1n' MUST S~LL·Yours for -
88800VESTIU::ET low book. Like new, low Triumph 9767
(Near MacArthur Blvd. nu, xlnt cond. AM /FM, 4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
&Jamboret' Hoad) on the floor. '74 Mazda '75 SPll'FIRE Yellow.
NEWPORT BEACH Roury Wgn. Call now AM FM, 17000 m1, sof.
833-1300 S46-6887 t/hrd top. s:noo. SS6-6t30
Auto•, Mew 9100 Aufof,' Mew tlOO ~ Mew flOO ....................... ················•······ ··••····•·······•······
llAISU/16~
lhe Datsun 610 is back. The 510. Best atl around
Datsun yet. A whote new line of economy cars.
Datsun 910. Perfect size. Perfect price: The Datsun 610.
..
LE SABRES
2 DOOR~ 4 DOOR
TO CH008E ROM ••• EACH PRJaD .AT .
Mtoe, UM4 ..._,UM4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . .
..
,.
I' '
VOL. 70, NO. 333, 3 serr10Ns. 28 PAGES
ByROBERTBARKER
Ol 181e Olilly 1'*4 St.ff
About 90 federally funded
emplQyees will be fired from
HunUngton Beach city jobs in a
phaseout program beeinnlni,
ne ... t February and continuing
through September.
City Manpower Director Bob
Cunningham said Monday th't
the phasing out of employees is in
keeping with guid~line;s of the
Comprehensive Employment
and Training Act (CETA.)
Cunningham aaid the city "is
trying to get more Involved" wtth
the tptentlon of the CETA pro-
eram to train the hard core un·
employed for limited periods so
~at they can find permanent
employment elsewhere.
The city has been usln_g many
of the employees In key positions
and some of them have been
worldni as long as three yean In
the city under the federal pro-
gram.
The Huntington Beach City
Councll approved the cutback
lutweek.
City Administrator Bud Pebito
said that 17 CETA employees
holding the most high priority
jobs also will face dismissal Sept.
30.
However, the city wUI continue
Korean / Plant
0.1, ..... ,.... .......
OILERS PRACTIC1NO TO HAVE A BALL
11 a Wor1d Record In Sight •t Huntington High?
Ollerhall Set
Game Takes 1,500 Players
Huntington Beach High Sebool
employees, teachers and stu-
dents play to break a world's
record for the largest game of
"Oilerball."
What is Oilerball?
According to teacher and game
organtier Blll Morehouse, the
game is played with 750 people on
each team. The teams try to keep
a five-root in diameter tnnated
bali In the alr and push it over a
chain link fence.
~orehouse said the game is
similar to volleyball -but prob-
ably a lotlesssertous.
The game will be held Thurs-
day at 12:30 p.m. at the high
school football stadium, 1905
Malo St.
ML.rehouse said he orguized
the contest to "boost $Chool UQity
and morale."
Envision
Thousands
In Payoffs
WASHINGTON (AP> -An
elaborate South Korean i~
telli1ence plan to plant an in·
telllgence network in the White
House, hire collaborators in the
offices ot congressional leaden
and pay off and manipulate U.S.
journalists, professors and other
persons was released today by a .
House subcommittee.
The 23-page plan, approved by
the director of the Korean Cen·
tral Intelligedce Agency in
December 1975, ~nvi1ioned
$100-a-moalh payofCs (o "i, least
14 employes of the Wblte House,
the State and Defen1e depart-
ments and the CI/.. The payoffs
weN labeled "manipulation ex·
peo.eea.'' ,
The ptan also envill9qed pay-
ments of at least '53,000 tor con· gresslonal contrlbullo&Js alld
"special manipulation'' pay-
ments to at lea.at 10 persons tn an
effort to influence conaressional
support for South Korea
The plan was released at
public hearings by a Houae in·
ternalioaal relations subcommit·
tee on KCIA acUviUet in the
United States. ·
It apparerltlf wa' obtain
from Scbn Ho'Yo J, who de!ect·
ed as the ltCI~·· Uiott cbief in
New York Cify JN& 8eptember:
and who was the lftdoff witness
at the hearinp.
In an· ~J •tatement, sub-
committee cnatrman Donald M
Fraser, <Minn ), accused th
KCIA of "outright subverslon" in
Jts effort to carry out the pl~ which was to gain JUPPort fot
government of President P
Chung·bee among U.S lead~ t
Fraser gave no indlcation bow
much the plan was actualb
month after lbe
strtbuted to KCIA
the United States. allill'th Korean effort to ln· ,coaEANS, Pa'e Ai>
'Silencing' Feareil
' MINOR QUAKE
Bo van Murder Case R4.TTLES coASr ...
Tales to Be ~ped
By MICHAEL PASKEVICB.
Ol-o.lty ..........
P'ASO ROBLES CAP> -A
minor earthquake rattled J>Or·
t1oa1 of San Luis Oblspp ~d
Monterey courities aboi4 8:*>
a.m. today, resideata ~ scien,. tlsta~ •
No injuries were reported fl'O_G'.\ the temblor, local l>Olice said.
The quake wa.s felt along •bout
a 50-mUe stretch of California
coaat from eoulbem Kon~
County to as far 1outb •a
Atascadero. residents repo~
to subsl4ize their salaries until
that tltne.
The city receives about $1
million yearly in federal f\Uldl to •
operate the CE1' A progr~m.
CETA pays u to $10,000 in ·
null salaries end the elty pay,s
artythihg over that amount.
'the city has been pfYina abollt. ~.ooo in subsidies yearly in
program.
From tb'.at total, tf\.e ctty will
~
Two brothers who alle1edl,v
wamed a San Juan Captatrano
man that they would show bis wlf• ~rapbs that depleted bis relatlonship wJth his
gtrlf rtetld if be dtd not band over
$4,000 hHe been ordered to face
arratounent Dec. 8 In Orang6
County StqMttlol' Court.
•
..
DAit. Y PILOT HiF
Coa
South Coast Reslonal Zone
Conaerv.UO. Cocnmiss1on mem·
bers approved Uuntinatoo
Beach's Local Coulal Work Pro·
cram Monday tho first In
Orange County.
The city is to receive $80,000Jn
federal ftmds to plan for 11\e rest
or the city'• future In termJ of
shoreline development. ·
Citizens will be appointed to
serve In a committee capacity to
mold the sha~ ol development to
com~.
Tlte wk ls expected to take
about 19 months and wlll require
certain changes In clty or-
dinances iD addition to local resi-
dents' idea, ft ptannins and de-
velopment. De~lopmeat of boll\ nalden-tial and commercial nature, In
most cases, is expected to be de-
layed for the duration.
Strawgln-l'letl•?
Eighth Body Found.
In Glendale Area
LOS ANGELES CAP> The
body of a young woman was
found today near Highland Park,
and a special nran&ler tuk roroe
was on the soene to deter.mine
whether she might be the eighth
v icti m of the stop·and·go
strangler.
'fhe body. found on Cliff Drive
in the Mt. Washington area of the
city. was the eighth to be found
wlthln a five-mile radius of Glen-
dale 1inee mld-~ and. the
third in the Highland Park area
Jn 10 days.
The 32-man etran1ler task
f oTce trom the Los Anceles and
Glendale police departments, the
Lbl Allgelet County sheriff's de-
partmmt and the coroner's office
was on tbescene.
There wu no jmmedlate ~
dicatiooClfbow the 11rl died.
The seveaotber Jirla, all raped
and stranded. were:
-Yolanda Williama, 21, found
on Forest Lawn Drive near Grif-
'1th Park on Oct. 18.
-Judith Lynn Miller, 15, found
on a La Crestenta front lawn Oct.
31 . -Lissa Kastin, 21, found bl a
Glendale~Nov. 6.
-Kristina Weekler, 20, found
Nov. 19 in Highland Park.
-Sonja Johnson, 14, found
Nov. 20 in Elysian Park.
-Dolores Cepeda, 12, fouod
with Wu Johnson.
-Jant_~velyn King, 28, fouod
alon1 a Golden State Freeway cl·
fcatnp near Griffith Park on Wed-
nesday.
All had apparently been ab-
ducted, raped -4 stran1led and
thett bodies ~ in a remot.
location from a car that stopped
ollly brief1.r to avoid being seen.
hencetbesi.and·&otaa.
The eight cases were evident.If
aot related to aeveraJ otber
bodies found in tbe ... ea thll'
JS)Onth. pOlice have said.
ill
Primary artu t.o be dealt with
Include:
-SboreUno acceaa to both.
pedestrtan end vehicular tramc,
at the aame Um.e aqurln1 pres.
ervatlOA of lhe coaauu environ-
, ment.
-Deslan oC a land UM plan for
visitor Hrvke and recreation
facillUet, ptrtltularl)t Hunt·.
ington Beach's clly and state
beaches.
-Houslnl plan.a, particularly
aimed at providing more lower
income and lower coat res-
identes.
-Developuient or a plan to
identify and plao ahead for
throats to coaata,I wattt and
marine rmou.rcea and bow t.o pro.
tect the environment aaainst
them.
The city had in<:luded the .Bolsa
Chica marsh in 1ta plan but com·
missioners agreed it should be in·
corporated int.o the Orange Couo·
ty Work Protrapi a.ince it is unin-
c or pbra~d territory, even
lbCM&J,b NrTOUDded by lhe city.
Commiuloner Rlmmon C.
' F'•Y, a marine blologiat from Venice, congratu)at4td the city on
thoroughness in preparing its
LOcal Work Proaram after the
unanimous vote. ·•1 ·01 pleased with the way the
cltf. hat laid thla Work Program
ou , " he dedared.
CoounisaJoner Fay •uttMed
HunUn;ton Beach's citizen com-
m lttee might eventually consider
creattng a blufftop par~ alone the
beachtront, 1ometbinc like
La8\&J\a S.ach'a Heisler Puk.
"Can we vote on lt?," • man ln
the audience cried en-
Lhualuttcally.
0 Y 01''Y• cot tny vote. I love
tlloeeparb," F'1~lared.
"' • t
li RB Gr.ant '* ~. * * * * J; • •
l,I Strallflled P.:joiecta Get
G ~r · Reriew To~ Fear rips w .. om.en Huntldjton Beach p~annlng
... • commiaalonen Will t'evlew U
. recommended• proj1e.t1 to be I N th t LA financed 'by •1.s mlllio6 In Il or eas federalHouslntAndCommunity
DevelopoWlltlUQda toni&ht.
LOS ANGELES <AP)-Fear is a common bond amon1 young
women in northeasteru Los Angeles.
Since a serlea o! brutal murders ln which nude or partially
c lolhed bodies of l l women have been found strangled or r'"4 aJont
highways, women heve beguntowalkeachotherhome
THEY AVOID lllTCHIUKING AND take rape·prevention
<'lasses Theydon'thang aroundtheshoppingmall lintheywsedto.
A 32·man sp('cial task force has been working on the cases for
'!eve ral weeks, rece1 vlng up to l,OOOhps a day from city residents.
The vlendaie News•Press has offered a $500 reward for Informa-
tion leading lo apprehension of the killer and is printing an informa-
tion bl nnk for readers to send in
"IF ff WASN'T FOR paying my rent, I wouldn't bebere, "said a
19-year-old salesclerk who works at an Eagle Rock Shoppln& Mall
record store.
A 12·year·old and 14-year-old who were among the 11 victims
WC re I ast seen leaving the m au.
"I run to my car arter work and I don't sit around and talk to peo-
ple,'• the young woman said Monday.
Like many women in the area who have been talking with re·
porters.she was afraJd to givebername.
"IT'S A BEAUTY," she added. "I'd say the younger kids are
down about 50 percent ln the mall. It used to be filled with kids, 1especially in the music store."
At Eagle Rock Hiah School, a 00.pital community educatiotl
specialist has been talkio1 to gym classes about rape and aelf· defense.
The latest school newsletter su11esta that parent.a pick up their
children after nilht activities.
''THE GIRLS ARE BEING VB&.Y cautious," al.id Alldatant
Principal Alta· Lee Avant. ''They have not become alarmed, but tbey
are concerned ''
Some young women admit alann., however.
''The kids talk about it a lot,'' salda 1'·Year-old Eade Roc~IW
dent. ·'They're scared. They joke about!t. but that'• just their ft1 of lhidinftheirlear."
1 A 16-year·old student said her friends are being mortcautious.
"NO ONE IQTCQBIK~ anymore,'' she said. "We don't 1q out afterdark. It.rytowalkbomewit.bothergtrts."
Los Angeles police have said that It'• PMJible that at i .. at'°D>e
v1ctilns had been btt~hhiking.
Stuaents at St. IgnaUus School att.e~ bJ' two of t,he )'OUllf
wof.Den touno rapea were WfA!DecJ to be. caltl~ wtth atrQf•n. A
•lmtlanwarn1nawasetvenb)'l.osAng-elea1cboolauttaonUea.
"lt '• frlght.enln1. but J try not to think aboUt tt." 14ld the lJ.,eu-
old record store employee. "That's just what be wantJ. Thi mortYCM.\
lhlnk about It, the mo&'epoweryougivetohlm.11 i
°"ANG! COAST
DAILY PILOT
The study sedt6n wtlf beetn at
7 p.m . in Room B-8, adjacent to
city council chambers. A )>ublic
heat1n1 on the items ll tcbeduled
Dec.6.
The projteta, whlcb have been
recommended by the city's Hous-
inc and Community Develop·
ment Advisory Committee, in-
clude:
-Subeldized. low cost loans for
neigbbol'bOod pre.ervaUoa proj·
ecta $250 000.
-installation of smoke detec-
tors in homes of low income
families, $30,000. -Emer1enc~ medical in·
formaUon system for low income
famllles, $5,500.
-Oak View atonn drain,
$95,000.
-Removal of architectural
barriers to the mobility of han-
dicapped penoae, $C0,0()9.
-tf pgrading of uUllttea and
land1capld1 for the pier and
Maln Street~. $271,000.
-hnprovements at Oak View
center. J15,000.
-Plftbue of property for Old
Town part site, ~jOOO.
-lnstallatlon at ptrldna at Ids--
torte Newland House, $2.5,000.
-Michael Drtve •torm ~
$175,000.
-lnatallatiao of a trafftc sJcnal
at 17th StHet and Oran1e Avenue,. tt7,000.
Tile s;luntni eommwlon also
will study a request bY developer
Lewis Ondadlo to NiODe aboat
20 acres In the Got.bard iadustrlal
corridor (rom tndmtrial to tea·
identta1use.
Pete Takes 011
"Pete," a pelican who has been hanging
dround the ·Balboa Pavilion in NewJM)rt
Harbor for several years, takes to the air
from the Pavilion dock to begin his daily
search for breakfast by the bay. Pelicans
are grotesque bf rds that seem to be one of
nature's mistakes. But have you ever
watched one fish?
Parents ProteSting
Students' Transfer
BJ RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. cw Ult 0.lly ..... MMf
About 40 parents of students at
Stacey Intermediate School ln
north Huntington Beach told
school officials Monday they
don'\ want their youngsters at-
tending Westminster High School
next fall.
"My daughter would rather sit
on a bare, cold floor at Marina
High School than 10 lo
Westminster High School," said
one mother.-
Huntington Beach Union High
School Dlsttlct offlcials are eye·
ing a proposal to shift about 100
students ln the Slacey School
area to Westminster Hith School
next fall wheu they are htgb
school fresh•n.
Under cUl'l'ent school atten-
dance boundaries, the&e students
wquld rPOVe up ~ Marina J{l&h
School.
Glenn Dysln1er, an assistant
high school district superinten-
dent, told parents Monday the
shift ls Jteeded to ease over-
crowdina at Marina High School.
Dysinger said Monday'• public
forum at. Stacey School on the
proposed th1ft wu c:alled t.o ex·
plain-to parents why the shltl ia
needed.
EarUer this year, about 120
Stacey parents won a battle to
keep their eighth graders Crom
attendin1 Weatmlnater Hlah
School.
School board members
scrapped the plan but are now
eyeing the same proposal.
O'yainger stid district
estimates predict a decline ln
enrolhnent at Westminster Hlib
School.
The Westminster campus cur-
rently has about 3,700 student.a.
Marina High School has about
4,000 youngsters.
Dysinger pointed out that the
Westm.lnater camp1.&1 has been
enlaried to handle 4,000 1tu·
dents. Marina was only desiened
to bOUle 3,000 student.I ancf bal
not been eJCpanded to accom-
modate its current enrollment.
said Dyainger.
Patents told Dysinger they
want to have their young$Lers at-
tend Marina High School because
it ls In Huntington Beach.
fi',....PageAJ
BOVAN •••
leader Alexander Kulik and
hold hlm for r1.D10m.
Kulik, 21, of Newport Beach, is
the only suspect currently free on
bail.
Police assert that suspect
Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, of 18822
Brookhurat St., Huntinaton
Beach, bas admitted to MinC the
trtnermnn ln the Bovan alaytna.
Flori ls belnc held wltbout
poaalbWty of ball, while auapect.s
Marone and Reaco remaio in
custody In lieu of Sl00.000 bail
each.
Monday, Flori's attorney
Davi~ Brickner entered a plea of
not cullty to drue charaes
aaahu1t hll ollent. Flori wu ar-
reated by Colta Meaa police, al·
Jecedly in p0sseulon or cocaine.
Brlckner also denied that bi.I
client WU a federally. relocated
witness, but admlUed that a
..vendetta" hat ¥en luued by
an unkDownpart_y ~t Ftorl'•.
family. . • ~ if ·
Plott ts due bact ta municipal
court Dec. 8 for arralcnment Oft -
b1i dtui arrest.
Kulik a1ao faces parate drQt
charces 1t.emmln1 trom bis ar-rest 1n Mili1on Viejo.
CHRISTMAS GEMS
AND JEW·ELRY
QQtstanctlng dlamona ~ttalr• earrtn;9 In all alz .. ~ ehle*. rqlng trom
$11 .. Sl.OOO \
Exqulalte whlt• long
baguette and round diamond& tel In ~l'l(lirl
IJC ,,.. $1.710
.,
' OS ANGEL§ (AP) -1be
y of a red·hatred woman ln
er 2o. wu found today dumped
Mlide a narrow winding Mt.
Washingtqn road, and police said •fie appeared to have been
of.tangled.
Police Lt. Dan Cooke said dis·
coloration around the neck of the
1lrl found on <!Uff Drive by a
atighbor indicated that the airl
may have been •trangJed, ap-
parently in a fashion similar to
the deaths of seven other young
women found raped and
strangled since mid-October
within a five-mile radius or Glen·
dale.
Today's victim was the third
found in the Highland Park area in lOdays.
"We don't know whether th1s
(slranaler> is one individual or
several Individuals," Cooke said.
•'There are simllarlllea but the
fact thal they are spread out and
because of other clues which we
can 't reveal, there may be more
than one strangler.
"Il could be two, tbree or four
dolna it," he added.
He said a special 1trao1ler
task force bas been hampered
and frustrated in its investiga-
tion of the stop-and·go strangler
case because of the time it takes
to identify each victim before
their associates and habit.a can
be checked out.
Residents in the moderate·
ineome hillside nelabborhood
said they heard docs barklnc
loudly and persistently between 1
and 2 a.m. today, but no oM re-
called hearlnt a car 1top or pull
a'#ay.
Unlike the other 1top·and·go
strangler victims, there \tn no
apparent attempt made to hide
tbb body, a1tb()Ugh there wu
brush nearby where the vlethn's
killer could have hidden her.
Cooke aaicl pieces of alasa,
ciaarette butts, bathroom tissues
and c.andy wrappers .were belnc
collected along a 500-foot section
of the road. He said lnvesUaators
would sill throuah tbem for any
kind of cormecUon with the other
cues.
·~We're gol~ to put all this
stuff tflnlUah a computer and
check 9ut peciple wbo have done
this 101.'t of crtme before, those
who aren't In prtaon now," Cooke
said. "Bllt il could be 10meone
new 01" eomeone troJD out of
state. Wejustdon't know."
The lieutenant said the last
cue be could recall with so many
wosnen murder victims was the
(See BODY' Pase AJ)
Korean Plot Revealed ·
White House, Media, Congress PayofftJ Eyed
O.Uy ,_ ""9 .. LM f'aYM
WASHINGTON (A P ) -An
e laf>orate South Korean in-
telligence plan to plant an in·
telligence network in the White
House, hire collaborators in the
offices or congressional leaders
and pay off and manipulate U.S.
journalists, professors and other
persons was released today by a
House subcommittee.
The 23-page plan, approved by
the direct.or of the Korean Cen·
tral Intelligence Agency in
December 1975, envisioned
$100-a-month payoffs to at least
14 employes of the White House,
the State and Defense. depart·
ments and the CIA. The payoffs
wer~ labeled "manipulation ex-
penses."
The money inclu~d $20,000 to
be paid to four 1.&nJdentlfied con·
gressmen in the form of $5,000
OC Officer
Mulls Suit
CONSTRUCTION CRANE LIFTS OUT BODY OF WORKER
Cr•n• ~••r W•• u••d 10 utt out Another Man Who uved Over Salary
I Safety Effort Ends p
ID Death in Irvine
By PIDl.JP ROSMAIUN
ot .. Oii., ...... IUH
A con.structton worker, sweep-
ina catwalks at 111n Irvine sewage
plant project as a safety measure
after another employee fell Mon-
day. backed into an open hole in a
catwalk and dropped to his
death.
Police said Leon Llamas, 64, of
San Fernando, fell 28 feet to the
concrete flooring of an open
sewage lank, striking the side of
his bead. He wu killed lmtantly.
Both accidents at the Irvine
.Ranch Waler District project off·
Michelson Drive are under in·
vestlgatlon by a state safety
a1ency. Jim Brown, district
manager or California Occupa·
tlonal Safety Health Act's
dtvlsion of ln<lustrial aah!ty, said
an investigation of worklna con·
ditions at the Ille would take Hveraldays.
of Anaheim fell from 1caffofdJni
atop the ironwork sewer vault.
WhJte broke hts back, and the
pToject foreman s aid he may
have been saved from death by
falling onto a pile of plywood
stacked at the bottom.
He we listed in stable condi-
tion today at Tustin Community
Hospital.
Police said they were told by
construction bosses that Llamas
was afterward assigned to sweep
all catwalks of sand and other
debris, as a precaution against
further accidents.
He apparently s wept in a
backward-moving direction.
Llamas fell through a 22-inch by
36·inch hole in the catwalk
tbroush whic h a ladder is
normally placed to climb into the
vault.
(See FALL, Pa1e A2>
By KATHY CLANCY
ottMDellJf' .........
An attorney for Oraoae County
Chief Probation Officer
Margaret Grier 1ald today Miu
Grier wtll ao to court if necessary
to obtain what he called a
"reasonable salary."
Santa Ana attorney Duff Hel·
sin& told county aup_emson that
the 5.85 pett.enV P81 tncreue
they were considering for Mila
Grier Is "inequitable, unfair and
discriminatory.••
Supervisors then granted Miu
Grier the salary increase recom·
m e nded by County Ad·
ministrative Officer Robert
Thomas which brines her yearly
pay to $39,365.
Helsina said Miss Grier's
987·member staff i.s the state's
second largest probation depart·
ment.
Jn addition, it.a $20 million an·
nual budget ranks the third
hiahest amona county probation
departments in California, be
said.
Y: et, the attorney continued,
her salary la seventh highest
(See SAIARY, Paie .U>
Water district officials said
they were shocked by the acci·
d•nts, the most attrtous in diltrict
hlttory.
'J'he sewer plant exp1u~1lon
project ts beinl admlnlatered by
...,. VTN Corp., a ml,jor county
c6Dtractor. The conatruellon COD·
tractorle aecontnc, ·
Gates Denies Jail
Sex. Bias Allegation
Only two houn h,fore the fatal
accldent: so-yeu ~d 'Bill White
·contributions for tbelr 1978 re-
election campaigns.
Tbe plan aJao envisioned pay.
ments of at least S53,000 for con·
g reaaional contributions and
"special manipulation" pay-
ments to at least 10 persons in an
effort to influence conaressional
support for South Korea.
The plan was released at
public hearings by a House in-
ternational relations su~commlt·
tee on KCIA activities in the
United States.
It spparently w11 obtained
from Sohn Ho Yount. who defect-
ed as the KCIA •a station chief in
New York City last September
and who was t.he leadoff witness
at the hea.rinaa. In an opening statement. auh-
com mlttee chairman Donald M.
Fraser. (Minn.), accused the
Man Hunted
Two 15-year-old Santa Ana
girls bitchhikin1 throul}l Irvine
Monday were kldnaped and
raped repeatedly before they
were released by their knif •
wielding abductor ln Carlsbad.
Police said the children were
not otherwise harmed.
They IOUlht a mUltary·lookin1
man, lJ to 21 yean old, five foot
11 Inches tall, 1'0 pounds, with
abort, light brown.hair.
The teenaaers told police they
began hitchhlk.ln1 along First
Street ln Tustin at about 9 p.m.,
tryln1 to get a ride to El Toro
Marine Corps Air StaUon. Police
were unable to say whether the
girls llveon th• baae.
They were picked up by a man
drivln1 a belge Ford Galule
four-door car With a Utah license
plate.
They said he offered to take
them to the base, but instead
pulled to the aide of tbe freeway
KCIA of "outright aubvereion" in
its effort to carry out the plan,
which wu to pin support for the
government of Presldeot Park
Chung-hee among U.S. leaders.
Fraser aave no lndicaUon how
much of the plan was actually
carried out.
However, a month after the
plan was distributed to KCIA
aaents around the United States,
the South Korean effort to in·
fluence Congress and ccwem·
ment leaders wu being widely
exposed ln U.S. newspapers.
One subcommtttee member,
Rep. William Goodling, (R-Pa.),
said KOreall efforta to carry out
the plan apparently were cut
short by the publicity.
Another three aldes were tq be
paid $100 a month to "strenlthen
ties with W," said to be an un·
'9t Sand Canyon Avenue in Irvine,
pulled a six·lncb buotln1 knife
and assaulted them.
Police said they were told the
man forced one ot the etrls to
drive while be raped her com·
Canion In the back aeat, ud dur· na a l~·bour drive to. Carlsbad
forced tbe 1.il'l1 to change pla~es
eeveral tlmee, continually abus·
lngthem.
Wben let out of the car at
Carlaba.4, officers said, the Clrls
called local police who contacted
the Irvine depatiment. Irvine of.
ficers drove to Carlsbad and took
the girls to a local hospital for ex·
amlnation and treatment.
Engine Useful?
WASHINGTON (AP)
Poland and Romania are trylnt
to buy an American·made
bellcopter engine.
named State Department aide,
and another three peraons ln the
Defense Department were to be
paid lhe $100 a month lo "concen-
tratedly infiltrate" the mllltary
aid dlvlsloo t.here.
Tbept.nalaoenvisioaedpay~
five penona ln U.S. lntelU1ence
acenclea $100 a month to
strentthen cooperaUon.
The plan envisioned bl~
three "paid coUaboratora" at
$500 a month ln what was er·
roneously lllted as tho "office ~
the Speaker (Senate and House),
omceofsecretarlat ...
The plan envisioned payinf
. three unnamed. White House
aidea $100 a mont.h to Implant the
intelllaence network there.
Another 1oal of the plan was to
hire at least two American re-
(See KOREANS. Pase AJ)
Countian
Eye~·Suit
<!Jver. IJeath ..
A Laguna Nlluel woman ls ez.
pected to me • W'l'Onaful death
autt In federal court Monday
seeklN $lmllllon in damaaet for
tbe cancer-caused death of ber
husband, exposed in 1957 to
radJatlonlnnucleartests.
Mn. Allee P. Broudy, widow of
reUred Karine Corps M-2or
Charles Broudy, uid in a
telephone lfttervtew today 1b8 ls
seekiJla the wron&ful death ac-
tion, "to halt the proliferation of
such tetts/' which she claims~
kllled hei' .hu$band.
Her busband died Oct. ~.more
thao ~ nan aft.er ho wttne5$ed
an atomic explosion OJ) the Yucca
Flautest.1narange In Nevada.
Tb• then·IJe•nant Broudy
wu to• trench about three miles
from around ~ and his wlfe
and doctors claim the blast ls re-
lated to cancer of the lymph
nodes dlsooYered less than a year
aco. He was alto "posed to
radiation from debris on a 1b1p
CSee DAMAGES, Pase Al>
•
RADIATION VICTIM?
Maj. Charle• Broudy
SEEKS S1 MILLION
Widow Patricia Broudy
Saddleback Colleae offlolal1
•re 1oln1 to lobby for Improved
bus traD1portaUon but they also
m ay consider cruthle a shuttle
11ervlce for studenta who live lo
the north end of their massive
diJtrict.
Trustee Harriett W alth•r was
appointed by her fellow trustees
Mo nda y to work with ad-
m inistrators and lobby the
Oranae County Transit District
<OCTD> for improved service to
the main campus ln Million
Viejo.
FroaPageAJ
She and the adminis trators
nlao were uked to study other
m ethods, lncludlne a shuttle
service, to provide transporta·
lion between the present campus
and the Irvine faclliUes which
are scheduled to open in tbe fall.
The trustees' act.ion came alter
Mrs. WaUher , a Tustin resident,
reported that if she were a stu·
dent it would cost her $2,2Q8 just
to drive to the college for four
seme1ters.
DAMAGES .MULLED. • •
towed from the Marshall Islands
tu San Francisco an 1948.
The retired offlcer was so weak
la~t September he could not
wulk. His wife said his weight
KOREANS. •
por ters, try to win support
spec1Cically among reporters at
t h e New York Ti m es
Washington Post and Christi~
Science Mo n ito r and
·'m anipulate" two news or·
gamzalions, the names of which
were deleted from the copies of
lhc plan distributed
The IJ )a n listed sizable
"manipulation expenses" for
trying lo win over the reporters,
but the hstr ng did not m ake clear
whether these were to be outnght payoffs
The plan ulso envisoned con-.
\Crling scverul 1Jn1vers1ty pro·
fessors, including one at Harvard
Un1 vcrs1ty, to support South
Korean President Park Chung.
hee's government.
T he KCIA churned in the plan
thal il had already won the sup.
port of eight U S. senators and 18
l luuse members a nd contacted a.
total of 26 senators and 70 House
members.
Besides the $18,000 for the
SSOO·a·month payments to three
pcn;ons an congressional leaders'
offices, the plan envisioned pay.
1 ng $20,000 for $5,000 contributions
to four members of Congress and
$9,000 for apparent •'special
mamuulation" of six persons in
two congressionalorrices
Fraser ~aid $750,000 was
1·arm arked m unolher KCIA plan
in 1916.
Frmta Page Al
BODY •..
Westside Rapist case, but he
pointed out that three individuals
wer e ultima tel y arres t ed
separately and convicted of those
crimes.
The 32·m a n stra ngler t ask
force from the Los Angeles and
Glendale police departments, the
Los Angeles County sheriff's de·
partment and the coroner's office
was on the scene.
There was no Jmmediate in·
di cation of how the girl dJed.
The seven other girls, all raped
and s trangled, were:
--Yolanda Williams, 21, found
on Forest Lawn Drive near Grif-
fith Pa rk on Oct. 18.
-Judith Lynn Miller , 15, found
on a La Crescents front lawn Oct.
31.
-Lissa Kasun, 21, round in a
Glendale ravine Nov. 6.
-Kristina Weckler, 20, found
Nov. 19 in Highland Park.
-Sonja Johnson, 14, found
Nov. 20 In Elyslan Par It.
-Dolores Cepeda, 12, tound
with Miss Johnson.
-Jane Evelyn Kina, ZS, found
alone a Golden State Fteeway of·
tramp near Gri!fllb Park on Wed· ntsday. •
OAANQI COAST
DAILY PILOT
dwindled t.o a little more than 100
po unds and he had to sell his
Huntington Beach bicycle shop.
Mrs. Broudy said she is more
interested in getting the word out
about what she calls "the horren-
dous prolifieration of nuclear
contamination," than io recelv-
in;: the settlement.
"Wh at I'm reaH y after is stop·
ping the spre ad of nuc lear
powe r plants and fallout and
nu c lear waste around t h e
world.''
"I want to get enough people
mad about this thing so they'll
write their congressmen and do
:-.omethtng about this horror "
She said that while above·
ground nuclear testing ended in
the early 1960s, dangers remain
from below ground level tests.
·'They were doing some below
ground explosions m 1970 and
som e leaked through a large fls·
sure." she said. She said about 30
civilians are seeking damages in
Las Vegas as a result of injuries
they claim they sustained in that
blast.
"I think if enough victims of
t h ese exp l os i o n s m ake
themselves heard, the govern·
ment is going to fi nally get the
m~sage,'' Mrs. Broudy said.
"l imagme there have been
quite a few incidents since test·
•ng began in the early 1940s."
Computing her car costs at a
rate of 15 cent.s per mile for the
46·mlle round trip from her
home. she said, it would cost her
an additional $6.90 each time she
went to the main campus for
re1lstraUon, counseling, use or
the library or attendance at a
campus event.
Predicting that the costs for'.
students from the Tustin-Irvine·
La&una area will get even
highe r, Mrs. Walther recom-
mended that the district provide
a shuttle bus service between the
two campus sites.
She proposed that the district
use its vans, which -111 be used
a nyway to carry books and
mater ials between the sites, to
transport students and faculty
members on a regular schedule.
. N.o estimate of the cost of pro-
viding the service was given.
However, Mrs. Walther sug.
gested !our ways of financing the
shuttle. She said parking fees for
a ll students, ''park and ride"
fees or fares and passes could be
established. Or, she said, the
service could be provided free
with the cost borne by the district or student fees.
The trustee, who was appoint-
ed to the colle1e board last
month, said the service could
prove a financial benefit by help.
mg to increase enrollment, re·
duce the need for duplication of
services and save mileage reim·
bursements.
'Silencing' Feared
Bovan Death Case
Tales to Be Taped
Oct. 22 shooting death of 'Bovan
o uts lde a Newport Beach
restaurant.
Rossi told the grand Jury in
testimony preserved ln the
transcriJ>U that he was one of
fi ve men who were offered
$25,000 lo kill Bovan and two
other men.
Rossi testified that the offer
was m a de by principals ln
Pl'asadam Distributin1 Intema·
Uonal, Inc. The Newport Beach
firm is said by local police to
ha v.e coMections with an in·
ternaUonal druc dtatributing or-
ganization and with the Hare
Krishna religious sect.
Police claim that t.be plot to kill
Bovan stemmed from Bovan's
decision to kldnap Prasad~
leader Alexander Kulik and
hold hknfor ransom.
KuUk, 28, of Newport Beach, ta
the only suspect currently free on
ball.
Pollce assert that 1u1pect
Jerry Peter Ftort, 41, of 19923
Brookhurat St.. Hunttnaton ·
Beach, bU admitted to belni tht
ttt11ermanin the Bovu 1Jaytn1.
Fiorl la beJn1 held without
po11lblllty Of ball, wblle l\llpec:ta
Marone U4 Reaco remalD bi cuftody Ill Ueu of Sl00,000 ball eaob.
..,. Mon day, Fiotl '• attorney utvfd Brickner entered a plea of
not 1uUtr to drua cbar1t1
•1•1D•t hf.I cJJent. Ftort wu ar-
ruted by co.ta Mesa police, al·
•ndJy 1D poesealoa of cooaJne .•
· Brlcltner a1IO C1eiled tbat ·hJa
client WP a fe&lra11,y nlocattd
wltn111, bUt admitted that. a
"vend ua•• baa beeD laaued b}'
an UnknOwil ~ •Caln.at l"iotS 'I , famll)'. .
'
She said tt also could provide
addlllonal employment op-
portun1Uet tor studenta \IDd ea a-
ble tho atudents to use their
trans portation Ume for atu~
and sociallzfn.r.
She said die shuttle service
al10 would be aafor and more
convenient for nllbt 1tudent1 and
the phy1icall)' handlcapped
because th&atops could be at well
lighted, sheltered plac_,.
,.
Prtson Looms ,
Man Facing 607-year Tenn
NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP> -A 32-year-old office manager facelil a maximum penalty of 607 years in
pmon and fin& of ur to $1.3 mllllon alter pleading
gullty to 186 counts o making threatening telephone calls.
Mitchell Beck withdrew his &ullty plea to the
charges l~t summer after a judge refused to honor a
plea·bargaming arraniement under which the max-
imum penalty would have been three monthe in jail.
On Monday, Beck entered IUilty pleas aaaln this time with the understanding that sentencllia wouid be
left to the discretion of Montgomery County Presiding
Judge Richard Lowe.
Assistant District Attorney U>la Ha1arty showed
Lowe the transcripts of statements by lout persons
who said they received threatening ~al}J from B.eej<1 who allegedly demanded that they perlotm sexwu
acts and describe them over the telephone. 1 •
Beck was arrested Dec. 15 about six months after
state and local police and Bell T.,Jephone security of·
ficers set up an elaborate computerized telephone monitoring network, police said.
. ...
U.S. Accepts Egypt
Invitation tO Talks ..
W ASH1NGTON (AP) -The
Carter admlniatraUoo officially
announced today It.a acceptance
of Etypt.'s invitation to attend
t a lks this weekend in Cairo
aimed at an Arab·laraell settle-
ment in lhe Middle East.
Acknowledalng that the U.S.
role has diminished, lhe ad·
ministration said it remains in·
terested in playfn1 a construc-
tive role in preparlne for the con·
venlng or a peace conference In
Geneva.
Hoddlna Carter III, the State
Department spokesman, 11ld the
U n i ted States wo uld be
represented In Cairo "at the ex-
pert level" but that the offlclal
who will lead the U.S . dele1atlon
is still to be selected.
Carter said lhe ct10lce would be
•'someone who has back around
and competence heavily In lhe
area."
Amo~ the possible represen·
tatlves beine mentioned are
Phllip C. liablb, undersecrttaey
or state for polltlcal affal. rs, and
Allred L. Atherton Jr., aaalatant
secretary for the Near Eut.
Spokesman C&JUr 1peclftcalJy
ruled out Secretary of State
Cyrus R. Vance u the American
participant 1n the talks called by
Egyptian Prealdent Anwar
Sadat ..
So far, amonc the parties in·
volved dlredly in MlddJe .East
diplomacy, only the United
States aod ~arael accepted
Sadat's invitation to meet to lay
the groundwork for com·
pre henalve negotiations ln
Geneva.
Oellf "'* 5Mrtt ....... TO SUE FOR SALARY?
PrObetfon Chief Grier ,,
I',.... Page Al
SALARY ••.
a m on a probation chiefs in
CaUforn.la.
ln addJtlon, Helaine continued Mias Grier recently was ottere4
a $C5,219-a-year posltlon evaluat·
lni the impact a cutoff lo federal
runda would have on countY.
youth proarams. 1
He contended that position;
which carried less respon.sibilltY
than the probation chief's job, of.
fered a '8,000salarytncrease.
• Supervisors Chairman Thomas
RIJey noted that poaftiol\ was on·
Jy a temporary one, limited to 18
month1.
Riley also contended the 5.8$
percent pay increase w~ consis-
tent wltb aalary hiltd IJ'Anted
moat other county employes and
called it a coet-of-llvlnc increase:'
He said Helsins was arewni
ror a merit pay lncreue wblcb wasn 't the haue .before
•upervison .
"It hu to do with the 111lary ~
the chief probation officer,•
Helstna conUnued.
He Hid Mias Grter't reputa·
tion and career of more than 20
years are 0on the lln4t." ,
".She wtll t4)te every step to
protect them both," he said.
F,,..POfleAl
FALL ••.
1
I r
There wu no ladder iD place at the time, police aald.
After the accldent. conatruct
Lion workers covered up the
openine with a plywood board.
police Hid. '
CHRISTMAS GEMS
AND JEWELRY
Outstanding di amon d solltalre earrings In all 1ize1
and ahapea. ra~lng from ..... u .ooo
Exqultlte whit• long
baguette and round olamondl •t In platinum
IJC prtc. II.HO
BHutllu~ Au5lrll fire opal with
c11amonds. Mt lo 14 harat yellow gold
•1 SYLVIA'°*'" Tbe Catt.et 8dminlatr1don IJ spon.orin.r a new . . aan
under which tbt Small Bualn•H Adnatal1traUoP I•
launcblni • Women·l•Bualn Ownerlhlp eanapelCJt, Tiie
tar1et It $100 mlilloa ln lo~ ~r Quart 'hr worn • mlie
by baoU with the fedtrtl IOVtnUDent'a tpuantN.
To•• ,_ Protr•Dl off U. ~. Ut• aaA u -.. hol&ijns oM-4•Y Hmlnars f~ otneiall and tnitnlttd
01st8P. A\ Vttt• Mntlnara. womea .,. Mart"• di un~ of ptrton I quallfle1Uon1, flnanclD1 a bua\nt11 ~J'Cff qt
capltal, fl>mil Of tiuttne11 or1anliatlona, marlltUft1 ud aG· ·
verU•In1, b4llln teCQJ'dl, ~wu. loeall1 av1llabl1. and tOGIUIMI' and bU1ln•s relatJOQJ,
IJ:IQNAU AtaEA'DY BA VE BEEN held In ,\ll1n&a.
Utlle Boclt, Wiobi'4. l>er>Ve.r, DaUu and ffoultop, SUU to
oomo Ult ~'Jn llfrt!ord, W P>ta. Mompblt Ud Ml~rnl. Men raott aboc the eeminara JrO IYtJltt>lt h'Orn
Barbara B. Dunn, director of Womm in Bldinna A4 Consumer Affalr'I, SBA, 1'41L St. N.W., WuhlDl\(rn, p.c;.
20:416.
Two-day aeminan for women alread1 la b ln ... wm ~held in the SBA'• re1lonal otfice1 beWtfln JaQuary and
M~l978. •
The San Francisco re1ional office of tbe &IA hM a U1t
of spring dates. Empbasla wlll ~ placed oe hnprovhaf tho
opportuniUes for women to bld 1ucceutull1 I or fO~trDJDent
contract. •ricl oa dlluinlnatJna ~ure1Jlent lllformatloa.
"The SBA lt 1olna
to bavt • 'new looll' ,.... .
intemally, with ir•ater MonAU'-
1treu on the •D~t· ''!"• • :;:_i.r,~~~°:11~~ Worth
wlth a .m>tt• cWfihJUtre
progrern t() eneour11e
bu.-lneu ownmNp by women," Ma. Du•uuay•.
0 WIU MM•l'ITED'roTllK lllEollBA n a ma·
Jor in1trumen& to attl•t women in ••lnlnc entry a"io the
•mall bulJDIM Hoior." 4t the 1t.,-t, t.bl1 umpaSan 11 to bo 1eared '° •hort·term
1oals to teotltni 88A prior\tiet. A pilot. prolJ'arn wUl be de·
veloped ln an area where woraen lite df Jl•ve eJ&periesico.~
rocua will be on nNda of women •Mklnl bualnet• h>us ~
t.hrouah ~Small Bu..flneaa Jnv11ijpent Com pan)' proira~1 Retired butineu volunteen and asiUv~ execUvts wlu
provide COUllSeliDI OD manaaemflht and &r•lninl maft•1en.
The SB~ will tncrelf• the purnbor of women loan offtctn and aupervtaory offlcen to M>vt.S. mon 11M1Uvi&y &Q the
problerna woinen tece ln bual.nMl. ln 11eh ot th• IBA'• lO
regional otncr'5. representativet will be dnip1t.d f«
woinen lq bualneta end to betp women who •1-11 to aet w
bualneu or wbo are hevtna \IOQblt lD rtpaylnf IBA
le>#OI. ovsa TBS LONGER TOM, nm SBA 1trate11 wUJ
be keyed to dffeloptng specific J>l'Oll'•m•.
The n-S tor Cbe proiram ii drameUnd by thole
statistics:
...... While wointn make up 51.3.perctnt ot U)e naUon'•
populatloe, tMy OW1\ only •.6 percent of Uae t»&alness~.
-Of •ll $8A lo•na laat year, only 11 percent wont CO women i lri clcJllaf term a, tho proportion was I pero.nt.
-IN n&eAL llf'1, LOANS to women havt •n aveus·
ing al>outl'lperotnttes• ln dollar amounta tbanot.btrloana. -In ma, ol\lf 11.9 percent of thole counaoled tbroup
the SBA Matta11mentAa1latance proarams were 'f'Omcn.
Market Still Hobbled
By Deficit ReJiort ~
NEW YORK <AP) -Tbt atoetr market ftll aharply today
in moderate t.r•din•, conttauift1 ita downward tnnd for a
second cooaecutivt 1easion, 1
The Dow Jones averue ot 30 indu.itrl•t •toeka fell 1J30 21 •• points to82'7.27.
Mlat Starla Did
Hll"-YOflK (l'PI
MLlt
'
. -1~0 H!W8
''A Dreem To Dteam" 8 TH! AVENGERS
Steed fella Into 911emy hand• *"' emma i. cut down to size. m MICKIY Mouse CLUB m 8UPeRMAH
"M~ToBum"
I'!) VILLA ALEGRE
5J30 G) BEWITCHED
"Allerglc To Macedonian Dodo
Blrda" e ADAM-12
"Taking It ~y" IB FREEHAND SKETCHING ,, MN! Perapect!Wt''
1:00 9 CBS NEWS
18 NEWS
EMERGENCY ONEI
Or. Brackett trlea to pereuade •
mother to keep her deformed
btby G BASKETBALL
Cleveland Cavaliere vs. Loi
Angel9e Lakera
CD THE BRADY BUNCH
Troubles baaat gltl.-hater Bob-
by when ha 11 klSMd by a llttJe
gltl who later report• lhe hu
• themumps.
Cl) THE f:\OOKJE8
Lieutenant Ryker takea a per-
' aonal lntereet In finding the vlc.-
tlm of a kidnapping.
I fJD ZOOM
• f '1!) AS MAN BEHAVES
Oii._ i°'"''
Ron Howard arrives
home after a
fraternity initiation
looking somewhat
like a disheveled ~hicken on Happy
Days, tonight at 8 on
ABC, Channel 7.
D 9 HOLLYWOOD
8QUAAE8
• THE BRADY BUNCH
.i.n. believing the la being
Ignored, buy1 heraelf a
brunette wig. m LET'& MAKE A DEAL fD L.A. INTERCHANGE
"lntlde Straight"
Potlle and Ralph are black-
balled, Rlchte la told not to
UIOClate With them. m CAROL BUANETT AHO
FRIENDS
Gueet: Steve Lawrenc:e. m MOVIE
' "A Converaatlon With Or. Mur-
' ray Bank•" I N&WSCHECK
THE GONG SHOW
8:00 ()) THE FITZPATRICKS
***'A "Huth, Hu1h, Sweet
Charlott•" (1985) Bette Davia,
Ollvla de Havlllend. A young
woman'• mind i. affeottd wMr\
hf!' man1ed lover la found
ct.ad. (2 hra.) ®)ABC NEWS e:ioa MOVIE ***'It "In Harm'• Way" (Part
1) ( 1965) John Wayne, Kirk
Douglas. An out-of-commlulon
Navy man It ... lgned to cap-
1 tura Important enemy-held
laland1. (1 hr., 30 min.) CD MY THREE SONS
When Chip adoptt • lhoulder
length halr-atyte, Steve decidae
not to be • 11rlct father but to
Q!_va the boy more att9ntlon.
tD OVER EASY
Eartha Kitt; planting bulba; the
Senior Talent Opportunity
program; polltloel power within
the community.
I!) GROWING YEARS
"The Chlld'1 Mind'' (Part 2)
(J) CBS NEWS
®) MERV GRIFFIN
Gue1t1: Bernadette Petert,
Salty Fleld.
7:0011 NBC NEWS II LIARSCLUB 0 ABC NEWS , CD t LOVE LUCY
"The Adagio"
Cl) AOAM-12
, Officer Reed 11 Ullgned to
write a magazine article •bout
hi• partner. fJ8 MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'1!) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY
"Earth Hletory" 1 (J) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:~ fZl) PLEDGE BREAK
· Regularly IChedui.d program-
' ming may be del~v-d due to
pledge break•.
7·MG CANDIOCAMERA r D NEWL YWEO GAME l
The festMtlet aurroundlng Max
F1Upatl1c*'1 Flrtt Communion
1te marred wherl NI tether t.
au1pended tron'I hi• job.
Ttlalmue Ruulala. Donald
Moffat, Robert Hogan guest
et•. 8 AMERICA SALUTES THE
QUEEN
Bob Hope wlll be Joined by
JUlla Andrews, Rudolf Nureyev,
Yoko Morlshtta. Paul Anka.
Harry e.&9fonte, CleO Laina,
John Dankworth, Shlrley
MacLalne. Alan King, The
Muppet•, Rich llttle, The
Brotherhood of Man •nd Tom-
my Cooper In a g9ta tribute to
Queen Eltzabeth II celebrating
Her Ma)elty'• Sliver Jubilee. 9 MOVIE *** ''Th• f'oad To Rio"
( 1&<47) Bing CrotbV, ~b Hope.
The llvea of two mµa1Cian1 take
a. tum for the b•tt• after they
atow away on an ooean llnar. (2
h1'9.). GO HAPPVDAY8
"B~ Bye Bl9*ball" Richie,
Pot• and Ralph are pledo-
at the eame fraternity, but when
Ratings Guide
I~ .,.. ,.._ KC°"""t to bOJr
office ~-~ 1or TV .,.. llldelld.,., • atlk.I
• • * * -Excellent
• • • -Very Good
** -GOOd * h -Fair
• -Poor
• 8PEClAl.
''The Good Old Days Of Radio".
Steve Man ho9ta • noslalglo
tr1bot• to the 1lrst fifty ye119 of
broadcaStlng. GD PAREHT EFFECT1VENE88
"Letting Go" A dltcuatlon of
power, valuet and i.ponaiblll-
ty h8'pl In problem lltuatlonl.
8:80 D 9 LAVEIOO! & SHIRL.EV
"The Stakeout" The gl'19 allOW
FBI aganta to UM their apart-
ment to oblefve the actMtlee
of a counterfeit•, not expect•
Ing Cermlne to be a prime
auapect.
G) CR088-WfT8
'1!) OVER EASY
Eartha Kitt; planting bulb•; the
Senior Talent Opportunity
program; political power within·
the community. • .
8:4S Cl) CONCENTRATION
1:008(1) M*A•S•H
An ottlcer with a cotd-bloOded
knaok for predicting caaualtles
prompt• a vfolent rMCtlon from
Htwkeye, whlle Charlee aytfera
embarr .... ng r-..lt1 from con-
aumlng a goormet feast.
8 0 THREE'& COMPANY
"Janet'• High School Sweet-
heart" Janet IOMe her ~
when the groovy campu1
Adonll of her high achool deyl
1tiowa up for a date and Jte*
and Chrlaey conaplre to IMve
them alone In the apart"*'L '
81 MERV ORIFflN
Gue1t1: Bernadette Pejert,
Salty Flekl, Dody Goodman,
Chetyl T'9g1.
G ~PIECe THEATRE
"I, Claudlua: What Shall We Do
Class of Vietnam
Veterans Profiled on ABC Special
ByTOMJORY
NEW YORK (AP) -"If you were a
VieSnam veteran you were suspect,"
Ken Delino recalled of hi5 return from
the war in Southeast Asia. "There w•• something wrong with you,
maybe."
~en DeUno was one or 20 or so young
men from the Class of 'Mat Chatham
Hiih Scbool In New Jersey who went
to Vietnam. "People who didn't &o to
World War II and Korea were the ones
who were strange." he said. ''In Viet-
nam it was the ones who went who
were stranee."
Several of Delino's claasmates re·
turned from Vietnam scarred or dis·
abled, one spent time as a POW -and
two didn't return at all.
Dellno's pauionate commentary on
the plight of the Vietnam veteran 11 a
common thread runnlo1 throueh "The Class tbat Wen~ to War. •i an
ABC News Closeup scheduled for
Tbt1rsday tnnlba. 'l'h• hour-lone
documentary features Dellno and
several ot hUI clU1matu.
effect of the war on a community with
which be was intimately involved.
"And the result waa a kind of an·
tithesia of how you see the Vietnam
veteran most often,'' he said. "If they
get coverage at all, it 's usually ol a
bunch of guys standlng on a street cor-
ner complainine.
••wE TOOK mE opposite approech
and tried to present the Vietnam
veteran ea the kid next door. Ute
human aide of the veteran, to see a lit-
tle of bia backiround and eo on ...
lbe result ls tbe movtna,
sometimes diaturblni story of ~
men who returned horne, many ot
them disllluslooed by the war, some broken by it, and were met by people
anxious to forget wbat had ttappened.
••1 hope lt'a not unpleasant or Ub·
coqifortable to watch," aald Gerdau
.. 308(1) ONeOAYATATIMI "Barbtra't Ftltrid" BatbJra
PIYt I high pno. tor lndnetl
wt-.n dti1Ptrat411)' frlendly CIMem•t• rMOhee <M for hefp.
8oott COlomtJY guetl IWL
(Plt11of2)
•O 80AP
(E&*oOe EleYM) Jtak:a talc• • nm, Nnd ~ hir phllan-
dtrlng hUlblnd; CorlnM oon-
frontt "Peter •bout hit b•turAor.
Butt and Mii)' ~ for a long..ent~ad .vent. (Net.
woitc •tcM.e. ~tal di.or. tkln) ,... _,
• P'ILM8 OF PeMuA!MON "MU!hoUM" ElnU. D'Antonlo
cn1tad thle mm. wtllc:h Juxt•
POMe ~ docu.
"*"-Y footage Of then Pr-.;
dent Nbcon With ftc110nat. comic
fllmmat8'1&1.
10:00. (J) LOU GAAHt
The .ubi.ct 1ot BUiie Newman'a
..,._ of llttolee 11 a frightened
~ = blttetad WW.
M!W8
AMILY
Of i..ov." An amc>-
roua boa ~ (Samantha
Eggw) deCldel Wiiii. t\u too
much j)Qt9fttlal to Nmaln an
errand boy and ~ young man
tuddenty flrtda "'"*" ~ moted and purtUad. e OITIMART
Agent 89 ecddentAllty dleoowr9
tt\st ahe It wotklng for KAOS. ·~ "The Merry Widow" B4Nerfy
Slltl. Allan Tltua end Andrew Fofdl are 1eet\nd 1n U\11 pro-
ductlOn of the San Diego
10:1e £f-:ews
10:30 e •1 NEWS 11:008 0 (I) (If NEW8 9*>UVWOOO CONNICTION II MOVIE
**1~ "The Tall Women"
(19ee) Anne Baxt•. Marl4'
Per9ctly. 9even women, the
90le euMYol'9 of an lndlan
muaacre, atttq\pt to reach
.. tety. (2 hrs.)
G) THE 000 COUPLE
Fellx plant a ~ birthday
party. for Otcar, wtlo loett.
birthday l*flee. e HONEYMOOHE.R8
Allee end Trix.It try to ~
that a happy marrtagt 1J dolf)Q
thl~ wfth their hulblndt.
11'30 8 Cl) C88 MOVIE ., ** "Night Terror" (1879)
Valerie Harper, Richard
RomanUI. The lone wltMM to a
highway petrolman'a murder If
l'Mntleelfy pursued by .,.. PIY-
chopa\hk) killer. (R)
8 TONIGHT
HO&t: ok>nnny Caraon. Guest9!
Dolly Plt1on, Euoene Fodor,
Or. Wlllltm Noten.
• a.ova. AM!fUCAH l1YLE "Love And ~ Binned Book I
LOW And 11te DOM' EX''
•Ill MOMOVIE '
i:• * "Smtih-Up On "'ltr• ...... 6" (1878) AObert eontad,
VR MN. 8oot .. ot ~
tlnd .,,. ~ chanOM h
MO<indl --0 IMlllv9 Chain • Oolllllon ~ on • c.11torn1a ~ at t1't cloae of • ~
day WMktnd. (A)
1=MMT The 1mart1 play Oolf to find a '**-Golf bait UMd by l<AOS. l ~A8CN&W8 MACNEIL I ~A&R
REPORT
MORNING u.-ooe TWILIGHT~
''The~y Rooln"
• FOR!VEAFERHWOOO
EHie ~ en alfalt; Sal
11""9 brMk1ut for Cathy and
Penny: Wenda ..... nventt home rncMe.. e MOVIE
** "King Of The Wiid
St Iona!' (1959) George Mont·
...-V1 DIMe Btewlt•. A wid-ow end ... ton .,. proteot9d
by • wUd ttllllon. (1 hf., 30
mine.)
• DfCK CAVITT ~: 8.J. PereCman, humor-
llt. 1Z:aof, MOVIE
• •~ '"T}'le ln~ble Woman"
(11MO) Jof)n &erryrnor. Jr., Vlr-
alnla Btuca. Gangatera attempt
fo gain a actentlst'a aecret for
invWblllty. (1hr.,25 min.) mrM<>V11
**~"War Of The Wlldclb"
(1943) John Wayne, Martha
&oott. TWo man tight ova1 otl
1:001T~
Gueat: "*'fY Miiier, author of
"TtoplO Of cancer:• e 11PY
Stunned to *"' ttW the Madonna portrait they hl!Ve
dellwred It a fake, Kelly, Scott
Ind K.aU. Cll'tWl1ght conooct a
dtlPtr•t• IChelne to correct . ~ib61teke.
1:15. (J) KOJAK
"Whefe Do You Go When You
H.ve No ~To Go?" A hot·
tempered conatructlon wonc.
con1ront1 • pro1pect1ve .-mployer. but lnadverttntly
klhhlm lrt• fight. (R)
1:30• MOVtl • * "The Public Affair" (1"2)
Myron McCormick, EdWatd
Blnna. A cruudlng eenetor 11
aubjectad to a Vlcioul rumor
awnpelgn by a lobbyllt group.
(1ht.,30 min.)
1:118 NEWS
1:.9 NEWS 2:008 HEWS e MOVIE • ••'4 "Jolwlv Trouble" (1957) E~ Blrrymore, Cecil K.ua.;
~· A womtn contlnuel to iMfdl for her long..mlllfng
tOn. (1 hr., 40 min.) D MOVIES ***''The WOttd In Hll Atm8''
(1952) 0!"9g0fy Peck, Ann
Blyth. A sktnctaa fella In lqve
wtth a ... captain, bOt .. kJd-MPPed by a h1"d Pttnoe on
VOL 70, NO. 333, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES .
. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .
A:lteraeo•
N.Y. Stoe
Niguel Widow Sues ·in Radiati~n Death?
A Laguna Nlg~l womaa la ex-telephone Interview today she la wu In a trench about three mUea last September he could ~eeetUement. She Hid that. while above-
pected to Ole a wronsful death seeking the wnm1ful death ac-from ground iero, and bis wife walk. His wtre said hls wcl1tit "What I'm really ane ll atop! ground nuclear teaune ended lo. ,
suit in fedeul court Monday ti()n "to natt the prollleraUon of and doctors claim the blast ls re-dwindled to a llUle more than 100 plnf tbe apread · or nuclear tho early 19e0s, danters remain
seeld.01 $1 million In damasee for such tes~ ,, '1!fhicb abe claims lated to cancer or the lymph pounds and he had to Hll bl.a power planta and f out and from below around level tests.
the cancer-caused death ot ber kllledtterhusband. nodesdilcoveredlessthanayear HunUn1tan8eachblcycleat_iop. nuclear waste ar od the "Tbeyweredoln1somebelow
husband, exposed tn 957 to UerhusbinddiedOct. rr, more a10. He wu also exposed to Mr1. Broudy 11a.ld 1be i11 more world." around explosions ln 1870 ~d
r?diatlonlnnucleaft.ests. than 20 years after be wttneaed rad.Jatlon from debri• on a sbip intere1tedln1eutn1thewo?dout ''I want to set enouab people some leaked lbrfu1b a larae fis-
Mrs. Alice P. Broudy, wldowd an atomlcexploaloa on the Yucca towed from the Maraball lslands about wbatshe calla "the bom:n· mad •boo\ this thlna so they'll 1ure,111hesald. Sbe sald about30
reli red Marine Corpe Major Flats test!ni ranee in Nevada. to San Francisco in 1.MB. do us proUfieraUon of nuclear write tbe1r cooireasmen and do civlUans are eeekln& dama1es in
CharlH Broudy, aald ln a The then-Lieutenant Broudy Theretiredofflcerwauoweak contamination," than In receiv· aometb.lngabou:t\btlborror." (8HDAMAGES,P-.eA%)
Safety Effort Ends
·' I 1n ·Death in Irvine .
By PIULIP ROSMARIN ,
°'""o.lly , .. tuft
1 A construction worker, sweep-
; ing catwalks at •n Irvine sewage
plant'project as a salet)' measure
after another employee fell Mon·
day. backed into an open hole ln a
catwalk and dropped to hls
death. Police said Leon Llamas, &41 of
San Fernando, fell 28 feet to the
concrete flooring or an ~n
sewage tank, striking the side Of
his head. lie was killed Instantly.
Both accidents al the Irvine
Ranch Water District project off
Michelson Drive are under in·
.. ·estigat1on by a state safety
ageocy. Jim Brown, district
manager of Callfomla Occupa-
Brothers Due
In Court on
Extortion Rap
tlonal Safety Health Act 'a
dlvlalon oUndustt:lal 1afety, said
an lnvesftaation of worklng con·
dltlons •t \h• site would take
several days.
Water district officials said
they were shocked by the 1cci-
dent1, the most serious in district
history. The sewer plant expansion
project ls being administered by
the V1'N Corp., a major county
contractor. The construction con-
tractor is Maecon Inc.
Only two hours before the fatal
accident, SO-year-old Bill White
o( Anaheim fell from scaffolding
atop the ironwork sewer vault.
White broke his back, and the
project foreman said he may
have been saved from death by
falline onto a pile or plywood
stacked at the bottom.
He was listed in stable condi·
lion today at TusUn Community
H()spltaL
Police said the~ were told by
construcUon bones that. Llamas
wu af~ard assl1ned to sweep
all catwllkl of sand and other
debtll, as a preeautlon against
fUhber aeei.denta,
He •Pparently swept in a
backward·movlna. direction.
Uamaa fell throuih a 22--incb by
38-lnch hole in the catwalk
tbrou1h wblch a ladder Is
normally placed to climb into the
vault.
There was no ladder Jn place at t~ time, )d.ke nid.
After the accident, construe·
Uon worker1 covered up the
openlnf with a plywood board,
poUcesald.
White House, Media, Congress RayOffs Eyed
WASHINGTON (AP) -An
elaborate South Korean in·
tetu1ence plan to plant an In-
telligence network in the White
House, hire collaborators ln the
offices of congres&ional leaders
and pay off and manipulate U.S.
journalists, professors and other
persons was released today by a
House subcommittee.
The 23-page plan, approved by
the director of the Korean Cen·
tral lntelllgence Age ncy l~
Halting
Highway
P~hed
Members ot the Dana-Niguel
Defense League went to court
Monday lo a bid to hall construe·
Uon or a highway that would COD·
nect o.na Point wiUt Lasuna
Niguel. Lawyers for tho SU-member
oraanlutloo ar11tt ia th~lr
Oranae CoUnty Superior CoUtt
lawault thal the project, ap-
proved by the county Board ot
Supervisors June 1. is not sup-
ported by an appropriate en·
v1ronmental impact report.
The board approved the bWld·
lne of a four-la.ne· hlibway &hat
would extend ~ Street of the
Golden Lant.em as part of a de-
velopment aimed at eventoalb'
linkin1 the area to Moultol>
Parkway In Irvine. . Supervisors vQted for the
project after accepting oneoffour
alternative plans The accepted
plan was based on a study or a
"210,000-acre area with a popula·
lion of 917,000 people and an
employment projection of 343,000
people The league, headed by Laguna
Niguel re si dent Jim
Richardson-a co-plalntilf in the
lawsuit-has raised more than
~.000 for the le&al fees it will in·
cur in the anticipated court bat-
tle.
The lawsuit also seeks to pre-
vent the county rrom acqulrln&
right or way parcels in the .,ea.
Such acquiJltion is likely to le&4
the county t.o enlarge the pro-
posed highway to slx lanes,
lea1ue memben ar&"4!.
It is argued in Ule lawsuit that
the environmental impact report
utlllied by county officials whttt
the controvenlal alt.ematiye wu
adopted was far too vague and
general and should be 1crapped
in favor of a more thorough study
of the Dana Potnt-La1una Niguel
sector affected by the highway.
Enrollment Down
LOS ANGELES <AP>-Declin·
Ing white enrollment In the
city'• school dlstnct bas made It
Impossible to achieve the goals Ot
the school board's latest lntecr•· • tloQ plan, court-appointed over-
acer Moo.roe Price HY•·
Dec ember 1975, envlslonod
$100-a·month payoffs to at least
14 employes ol the White House,
the State and Defense . depart·
ments and the CIA. Tbe payoffs
were labeled "manipulation ex·
penaes."
The. money included $20,000 to
be paid to four unidentified COD·
gresamen in the form of ts,000
cootributionl tor tbelr 1916 re-
elecUonc~paip.
The plan also envtaloned pay-
Runs for Lite
ments of at least $33,000 for con·
gresalonal contrlbutlona 1t,nd
"special manlpldatloo•• pay
menta to at t~ast io pUJOnt ~
effort to lntl'*Ce CODll'efSl
supPortfqrSOutb Korea.
The plan •u teleas6d at
public liUiiiiiP by a Hc>uH 11\-
t.eru.atlonal re.JM.Jou subcommlt·
tee on KCIA acUvlties in the
Untted St:Uel. •• It apparently wat obtained
from Sohn Ho Y owig, who detect·
SC Jogger Target
Of Marines' Shot
A San Clemente beacb Jouer
told poU~ be ran tor hla ll(e r.Jon;
day ni&ht when Uuee MarlPes
said th~ didn't {ike the Yfay be
hi
-:as tWmlna ~ ftfed •bots at m.
Jo11er Bob BaU•y called
police from 231 Tratal1•t Lane
at 8:30 p.m., ball n hoUr after
pollc!e received a call froQl u
A venida Granada realdtnt, who
said a bullet bad just ripped
through his apartment.
Lt. Clifton\ Gates of the Su
Clemente Pollce Departlll'ent
said there ls "an exi.reme prob-
ablllty" the two shooUna incl·
denta ~re related.
A Police check at tht home o(
George Tacbumy, 131 Ave.
Granada, revealed that a .22
San Clemente 11tlsfiec1 the San
Diego Regional Wat.er Quality
Control Board Monday that the
city has corrected lls faulty
sewer system aufllclently for
16-month controls to be llfted.
· The board ruled ln July, 1976,
that Ute city wu in "lrosl viola·
lion' 1 ol waler emuent atan·
dar<ls'. It applied some of the
strict.est penallieJ ln th' board's
blltory, allowtnc no new sewer
connecUoas unUI the city proVed
tuelf In con,pUance with wate.'
quaUty cont10l 1tandardl.
The sewer he>Okug ban wu Wt-
ed by degi:ea but the board r.-
talned the a\lthOrlty unUI M<>n·
day to lmpoae a new ban at u.y
time without requlrlnt a public
.hearlnf.
· San Ctemeni. City an.pr
Gerald Weeki told the board
Monday that tb clty 14 =lb• $1.2 mtWon to correct enclen·
clel to the uwei&yatem. •
The lneri&Sed sewer coSU to
th• city pr:ompted Ian
Clemente'• citY council 14 Oc·
caHber slug bad entered the
apartment building •t Ut Ave.
Granada and continutd-lnt.o the
Ts~bumy bflme.
'l'be uaca 'DO~.
A police oUleer taktn& a~ rrvm B.aWtJ ca Tt1fll1•r tane.
alx bloc:U .oul.b Of tb• :&VClda
Grow biCiden~ 181'9 he heant
a iOUftd Of lunftN lD'\be~a·ol
tbebeaCh.
Balley told police he was fired ob as·bc_.ran on T·Street beach.
He 1auf three Marines. we14int
blue 11eam, took exception to the way fie ran. They fired at him on
the beach and continued firing as
be ran acroes the train tracp
overpa11, which provides
pedettrian ace,ss to the btlclch.
Police searcbina the area were
unable to locate any suspects.
ed as the KCIA 's stftlon chief in
New York City lat September
and who was the le.doff witness
at the bea.rtftltl.
In an open1n1 statement. sub-
comlftittee chairman Donald M.
Frater, (Mli:m.), accused tho
KCIA Of '1outrliht aubverston"m
lta effort to cal1')' oqt the ptaa,
wblch to pm support for~
govemm of PreslcSent Park
ChU.Ol·hee among U.S. leaders.
(See KOREANS, Pace iU)
Another.
Woman
Strangled
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
body of a youn& woman was
found today near Hl•hland Park,
and a special 1traqler task force
wu on the actne to d.eterm.Uus
whet.be?'. lbe milht be the eighth
vlctO• of the etop.add·IO
atraaJw. •
The bOd.J, tOODd on CUit J>ri
ln the Ji[L WUhloct,On aru of.the
clty, WU the ellllltb to be foUzid
wllbl.n a five-mile radius of Glen~
d•le 1lnce tnld-October and the
tbtrd i.n the Hilhland Park area
inlOde)'f.
The 32·man 1tran1lor tuk
force from the Loe Angeles and
Glendale POI.ice departmehts, the
Los Anaeles County aberifl't de-
partment and the coroner's office
W810Dtbe9Cene.
There wu no immediate ln·
dlcaUon of bowtbe girl died.
Tbe teven other girls, all raped
and 1trlingled1 were:
-Yolanda Willlams, 21, fowtd
on Forest Lawn Drive near Grif•
fith Part an Oct. 18.
-Judith Lynn Miller, 15, found
on a La Creseesita front lawn Oct.
31.
-LJssa Kasun, 21, found in a
Glendale ravine Nov. 8.
-Kristina WectJer. 20, found
Nov.19ioHlghland Park.
-Sonja Johnson, 14, found
Nov. 20ln Elysian Park.
-Dolores Cepeda, 12, found
with Miss Johnson.
-J'ane Evelyn King, 28, found
along a Golden State Freew1y of·
(ramp near Grlffllb Park on Wed-
nesday.
All bed apparenUy been ab-
ducted, raped and strantled and
tbelr bod.lea dwnped in a remotd
locatlbn from a car that stopped
on\)' briefly to avoid beina seen,
her>c• tM 1t.OP-and·10 ta«. "
Tho el&M cues were evident.it
not relate<t to several other
bodies found tn the area thls
month, POUce have said:
lnlUMb' lnveet11at.ors lncludid
on their lilt ttio November doatbj or Theresa Berry, 19, of Pomona.
<See IODY, Pa1• A2)
)
DAIL y PILOT use
Sex Bias
In-Jail
Denied
.,TOSURLEY
~
A woman prisoner's allegation
that slfttand ~bers of her 11ex
are \Jkttms of tfisutmlnaUon at
the O~ttCoafy' 7Ml tw. ._.,
c halldgd blJ amff Irr.a
Gates. And Gates warned that If coun-
ty superYisors chose to aclon the
recommendatrons of Bal"&anr
Dretzka Molar, 4"l', of .4natleim',
''it would' cost the eountymitlims
and mdtions of d'otlan frtm'I" tall·
payers' pocltets ...
Mrs. Mol'ar, now serv1•" a one
, car county jarf rerm on a dr\11
u ... e conviction, datmetf in a
lawsuit riled l\fomfay tflat wemett
11r1sonen an-~ demed' many
11 eedoms and privileges ac-
1 orded to male inmates.
Sh~ pointed out 111 a Superior
Court lawsuit tllat women
pris~ .... not ~e.11 to joia
male ,rt~ ill tc · se•
tences at sail bra~jaalt asllle
Theo Lacy facfftty and tfle flonor
farm. "There's a simpM ans.w~ to
that " Gain said. #"By ;.a., we.
mu;/t kdpo die male an• ielnal•
prisoners apart and if we nae~e
the women to Lacy und the farm
wc p'acticalfJ )uwt to buiW
scpa.aM-faeilitJe.
· "flw ccet ~ be abeoWildy
enormous," Gates wv~ "A.ad
we would ban ~ ~• cost of na.a pe~ lf we wen
to nNll naea a.Ml womca • braach
j a I~ dtrties.,"
Gata 9aiiJ tM liawM.ll filed bJ
att•naey Lawrea«e &aealey
over**e.t ~ lact tllat womea
priso•n ia tlle Sellla Aaa ce.-
tral j aii acU&ally eo~ pnvi'-.ps
-not avaftahre lo mare inmates.
Forum Slated
On Day Care
In Clemente
The impact on a community of
quality day care wall be dis·
t·uHed Wedne5day in Saa
Cle mente by Nancy Noble,
t·h1ldren'5 sentees diredoc' at
<>rangeCoest ~e.
Miu Noble will addres. a
potluck dimleT med.ing of Cbild
Da¥ Care in South Orange Cowl·
t y tlUZlln'• achtsory committee.
The dinner is planned tor 6=15
p m . at tlae home of Lee
Steelman, 144 An. de la .Faz.
Tbe meetui« marks lbe end of
the comm1llec's first Y•ar ol .
planoang for lai g b quality,
moclerately priced child day care
in the south county area, •aid Mrs. Steclrruan
Additional 1nforrnallon on the
commilt.ee or on Wednesday'5
meeting as available by calling
Mrs. Steelman, 492-6808.
Trustees Eye
School Sites
At Meeting
The Laguna Beach Unified
School District advisory COUDCll wtn m eet Wednesday momln' t.o
di1cuss school i;ite conndl pro-
cedures and planning iranta Wl·
der Assembly Bill G . ~
Tfle council, comprised of
representatives from the dis-
trict's five school goals commit-
tees. will meet at 9 a.m. Jn db·
trlct ofnces at sso Btamont St.
The school site councils, to be
established at each campus, anr
a requirement for speelal tune£.
inlf andft the new assem61y btll.
Other topics to be discussed in-
clude intra-district transfers.
state testint results and tbe ~
suit. of the Thaman com.manlty questlommfre.
DAILY PILOT
Marion Malher ..:fte> T .... es fHI
~AJ
DAMAGES. •
Las Vegas aa a re5ull of injune.s
they daim they sustained m that
blast.
"I think if enough victims of
t h ese. explosions mak e
thcmsel'Yes heard. the govun.-
ment is ~g to-finally get the
message," Mrs. Broudy said.
••J imapie then have beea
quite a few incidents 1iace tat•
1ng be,-mn.tbeearty IttOs. ••
11 Sl8hl
Seroices Set "'
. For W ednaday
Mrs. Marion Mather. 88, a
Orange County r,esident for near-
ly stx. decades. diH Mcmdiay ill
Santa Ana after a leqtlayillltas.
Yn. Matbet'wa * ...._.ol
E menld Bay r eshteat Kit.
Armstrons. r~meT wv.a•s
page editor at U. ~ O>all
News-Post.
Hrs. ArmstrODI saN au
parats ...,.... to Seal.a AD in
1919 where lter '**· caaa. M atller, fouMecl dl• ..._
•
Savings and 1...-A,..i ...
That buliwww ..... lat.a' sold II)
Great Western Financial Corp.
following his death.
Mr&. llaUaer was educated la
Ch 1ut0t .ct Ne• Yorfr prt.-
sc hoots bet~ ~ ,raduated
from Marlboroqh ScAool ~Los An~&ea. She 1'as actiw la the
Chrkttm Sdace Ch•dl ~md
EbeD aod was a regent or the
Daughters of the American
Rnolution. S~r•iu& •re s efled•led
Wed nesd•y at Rosetfa le
Cem ctery In Los Angeles. S•r.i•or1 ta~a ... three
child:ntt. 10 ~ and
Seftn gftat,,.fl •alt'6Jcfra..
Fear Grips Women
In Northeast LA
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Fear is a common bond amoq-JQaDC
women innortbeastemLosAngdes.
Since a 9eries of brutal murders In which nude or parttaffy
clothed bod"ie~of 11 women barn been fOUDd atrA111led °' r~ aklag
highways, women have began to walk eacbotberhome.
THEY AVOID HITCHIDKING AND take rape-prevention
classes. Theydon'thangaroundtheshoppingmaJlUketheyusedto. ..
A 32-man special task force bas been workina on the cases for
sever at wets. recetinag aptol.OOOUr»adayft"OC'llGty~.
The Glendale NeM-Prdshuoffeted a '5(Jera-...df« iDl«Jna.-
tion leading to apprehension of the killer and is printing an informa-
lion blank for readers tosendUi. ', ..
SD Victim_ Reporb
Being Kidnapped
A San Diego maa approached
two Sma Clemaita polke officers
on eollee break a u aD.DicJlt
restaurao& at 4 a..m. Koeday and
told them he had just been re-
leased by two kidnappers.
Robert Moore, 41, toltl police
two men apJJIOPdleit lbn to ..
hours earlier ilt Sen Diego at a
beauty shop ~here he works as a
janitor. L.
One of t1'le •a bHf a ean <M
Moore and forced trim to ~V\?
them in his van to two shopping
centers, where they see1ned to lie
looking for someoae.
The two men appeared lo be
Mexicans, Moore said. The gun-
man ~ ~ken Z'nglbfr, t~
seeon6 man anfy ~-~
Weft bodr flt tlleiT' twenties. be
saicf.
Abowt an PMN1' and a half aft.a
the drive at gunpoint beran.
MOOl"e' was mstn.cted to drift DO~ Clll die San ~gt) P'fEE#&y,
As ~ van lll'P"J"lelted tile U .S.
Bonfer Patrol dleclrpoint jalt
sottfh ol San Clement~. Ule two
n1ea cot an tfle floor of tk •tlfn-
cle. thttpn 9trll • tMclriftr.
·-ne ..,,. W&T Ute ..... lier
patrol acimt:s a.Id ..._ -an~waif~ .........
riglat.1Ptoeknm."--.uM.·
''Tiiey .... 't-~ jmt ......
me uan..ip..
··1 dilla"t...rto...u-. .....
ny mo.es. .. lie 9llilL -n.. ~
were ~Y YU7' wwww
alrad7.''
As ldGD as o.e ... rad P'S..
Clemente, tbe &M-M OI .. ..
Moore toSUlp t.beOJC ad .... JS
mbrutes ifter'UJ,ey pt.-bcfse
actmc. "" "I _,ed tkre JS .....,. •
the I star1ef &M mOCor ami1
dr~ nu cnrq,. ...... ! .....
in li.elll!&ba~tM:y'9111ka ,
coa:pk It...,_ .. llMl'e afd.
Afew-llPCM ..........
theSlmO. ntefOlieeofllcers.
I 'Tiiiey .... a.,. bad Rftr
hearcl of a.c.e Wre. ._ ... ..._
$aJd. "I was Just glad t.o be gol.n&
home.
"For foarhours !~expected
to die ... be & .. r ... id._. a
that gqwttl ti9 IDll,, ant an J
wanted was to see my wtfe and
my boy again."
•
KOREANS.
CHRISTMAS ·GEMS
AND JEWEI:~Y
•
,
l
)
)
~
7
fd,......,....,_..,~..___.~..,..
'Strangler'
LOS ANGELES (AP,) -TM body or a red-haired woman 1n
her 20s was found Wd'y dwmped
be"de a narrow whulfnt Mt.
Waabin&tonroad, enst~Hcetaid s~e appeared to bevo boen
1trangled.
Police Lt. Dan Cooke Hid dis·
coloration al'OUDd the neck ""the girl fotuld on Clift Drive by -.
•1chboJ' lndlcated tbat thi tlrl
may have been 1tran9ted, •p-
parently ln a fuhion almilar to
the deaths 9f seven other young
women JOuod raped and
. stran1led since mid-October
within a five-mile radius of Glen·
daht.
Today'a victim waa the third
fowid In the Highland Park area
in lOdaya. .
"We don't know whether this
(strangler) ia one individual or
several individuals," Cooke said.
•'There are slmllariUes but the
fact that they are spread out and
because of other clues which we
can't reveal, there may be more
than onestrangltr.
"It could be two, t.bree or four
doi~ It," be added. He said a special strangler
task force has been hampered
and frustrated in ill lnveaUca·
lion of the stop-and-10 strancler
case because of t.be time it takes
to Identify each victJm before
their usociates and habits can
be checked out. Residents in tbe moderate·
lncom• hllllide nel1bborbood.
said they beard do11 barklnl
loudly and persistently between 1
and 2 a.m. today, but no one re-
called bearing a car stop or pull
away.
Unlike the other st.op·and·10
strander victims, there wu no
apparent at.tero~ made to btde .. We're aolD• to put all thb
tbla body, althOUlh there wu stuff thriJugb a eomputtr and
brusb nearby where the vlcUtn'a • check out people who;.have clone
klller could have hldden ber. thll sort: of ~rime betore, thole
Cooke sald pieces of 1la11, wbo aren't Jo prlJon now." Cooke
ci1arett.e butts, bathroom tias\M!S aaid. "But lt eoutd be someone
and candy wrappers were beini new or someone from out or
collected along a •toot section state. WoJustcloo'tlmow."
of the road. He said invattaaton TJ:le lieuteoant laid the ta.st
would slit ttuou~ them for an,y can be could te4:all with so many
kiild of connecUon with the O(ber women murder victims wu the
cans. <SeeBODY, Pace AZ>
Korean Plot Reveil@d
WhUe Hou.se, Media, Congress~Paydffs Eye'!-
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ao
elaborate South Korean in·
telUgence plan to plant an ln·
telligence network in the White
House, hire collaborators lo the
offices of congressional leaders
and pay off and manipulate U.S.
journalists, professors and other
persons was released today by a
House subcommittee.
The 23·page plan, approved by
the director of the Korean Cen-
' tral Intelligence Agency In
December 1975, envisioned
$100-a-month payoffs to at least
14 emptoyes of the White House,
the State and Defense. depart·
ments and the CIA. The payofrs
wer~ labeled "manipulation ex·
penses."
o.lty Het ...... _, ...... .,..
The money included $20,000 to
be paid lo four unidentified con·
gressmcn in the form of $5,000
OC Officer
Mulls Suit
CONSTRUCTION CRANE LIFTS OUT BODY OF WORK!A Ov s l
Crane Earfler Waa Uted to Utt Out Another Man Who Lived er a ary
1 Safety Effort Ends
In Death in Irvine
By PIDUP ROSMAiIN oe•D1111fit•1llff A construction hrker, sweep-
ing catwalks at an lrvlne sewage
plant project as a safety measure
after another employee fell Mon-
day, backed into an open hl>le In a
catwalk and dropped to his
death.
Police said Leon Llamas, 64, of
San Fernando, fell 28 feet to the
c:oncrete flooring of an open
sewage tank, strlkine the slde of
hls head. He wu killed lnatantly.
Both accidents at the Irvine
llanch Water District project off
Michelson Drive are under in·
vestigation by a state sarety
agency. Jim Brown, district
manager of California Occupa·
tlonal Safety Health Act's
division oC industrial safety, said
an investigation of workine con·
diUons at the site would take aeverat days.
of Anaheim fell from scaffolding
at.op the ironwork sewer vault.
White broke bis back, anci tne
project foreman said he may
have been saved from death by
falllna onto a pile of plywood
stacked at the bottom.
He was listed in stable condi·
tion today at Tustin Community
Hospital.
Police said they were told by
construction bosses that Llamas
was afterward assigned to sweep
all catwalk! of sand and other
debris, as a precaution a1ainst
further accldents.
He apparently swept in a
backward-moving direction.
Llamas fe)l through a 22-lnch by
36-incb Jlole In the catwalk
throu,_b which a ladder is
normally placed to climb into the
vault..
<SeeFALL. Pace AZ>
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .. Delly ......... "
An attorney for Orange County
Chief Probation Officer
Mar1attt Grier said tod•Y Ml.ts
Grier will go to court if necesaary
to obtain what be called a
"rcasonablesalary "
Santa Ana attorney Duff Hel·
sing told county 1upervtaora that
the 5.8S percent pay increase
they were considering for Miss
Grier is "inequitable, Wllair and
discriminatory."
Supervisors then granted Miss
Grier the salary increase recom•
mended by County Ad·
miniatratlve Officer Robert
Thomas which brln1s her yearly
pay to $39,365.
Helsing said Mlss Grier's
987-member-staff ia the state's
second largest probation depart·
ment.
In addition. ita $20 mllllon mt·
nual budget ranks the third
highest among county probation
departmenta in California, be
said.
Yet, the att.omfy conUnued.
her salary is seventh hl1hest
(fJee SAIA.llY, Pqe AZ>
•Water district orficialJ said
they were shocked by lbe accl·
dents, the most sertous ln district
history.
The sewer plant expansion
project ls beint administered by
the VTN Corp., a major county
contractor. '!'lie conatruc:tton con·
trJctorlsMaeconlDc:.
Gates Denies Jail
S~:x. Bias Charges
Only two bO\iri before the fat.al
a.ecldent. SO:yea.r-old BUl Whit. "The COit would be absolutely
enormous." Gates warned. "And
we would have the additional
cost of extra personnel If we were
to mix men and women In braneb
Jall dot.lea."
Oates 1ald the lawsuit filJd bY
attorney Lawrence Buckley
overlooked the fact that 1'0mell
prlsonen ln the Santa Ana cea
tra1 Jail aCtUall1 enJOy pdvU ...
not •~allMle to male lnma&el.
.. They participate in wort
cse.1~ PaaeAI)
·contribullon.s for their 1976 rfi.
election campallDJ.
The plan also envisioned pay-
ments of at least $.'53,000 for con-
gressional contributions and
"special manipulation" pay·
ments to at least 10 persons ln an
effort to inltuence coneressiooal
support for South Korea.
The plan was released at
public bearings by a House in·
ternatlonal relations subcommit·
tee on KCIA act.iviUes in the
United States.
· It apparently was obtained
from Sohn Ho Youn1, who defect·
ed u the KciA's station cblef In
New York City last September
and who was the leadoff witness
at the hearinu. In an openinll statement. sub.
committee chairman Donald M.
Fraser, (Minn.), accused the
KCIA of "outright subvenlon" in
its etrort to carry out the plan,
which WU to iaiJlSUpportfortbe
government of President Park
Chung-bee amon't U.S. leaden.
Fraser gave no indication bow
much of the plan was actually
carriedoul
However, a month after the
plan was distributed to KCIA
aeents around the United States,
the South Korean effort to ln·
fluence Con•resa and 1overn·
ment leaders was beln1 wldeb'
exposed tn tt.s. newspapers.
One subcommittee member.
Rep. Wllllam Goodling, (R·Pa.),
said Korean e!forta to carry out
the plan apparenUy were cut
short by the publicity.
Another three aides were to be
paid $100 a mooth to "strenlthen
ties wlth W," said to be an \qi·
named State Department aide,
ud •ootber three pel'IOD.I 1n the
r>.fense Depaitment were to be
paid the $100 a month to "coneen·
tratedly b\flltrate" the mlllta.ry
aid di vts(on there.
Tbeptanalaoenvilionedpaylng
five persons ln U.S. inteW1ence
a1encles $100 a month to
strenltben cooperaUon,.
The plan envisioned hirlng
three ••paid collaborators" at
$500 • month In what wu er-
roneoualy llated as the ••office of
the Sl>eaker (Senate and House).
office ot aecretariat."
'rhe plan envisioned paying
. three unnamed White House
.aides $100 a mon~ to implant the
intelllgeace net.work there.
Another goal of U..i>lan was to
blre at least two American re· •
. (SeeKOREANS,PaJeAZ)
'Silencing' Feared 1.AJSt Rites
Bo:vaii Death :€ase. S'lated for '
Taies to Be TapeH Mr./llaitiblet ·
By MICHAEL PASKEVICB °' .. ~ ...........
Fears that key witneues in the
murder case of Stephen John
Bovan of Fountain Valley may
NB OpP!'ses
New Flights
Newport Beach City Council
members pasJed a resolut.lon
Monday opJ>Osing proposed
fil&btl by Air California and
Western Air Lines between
Oraoee County Airport and Las
Ve11aa. The council bas cona.lateotly
opposed any expansion of
factlltles at or flighta from the
airport because of noise prob-
lems. Both airlines reeenUy request·
ed the new routes from the Clvil
AeroaauUcs Board. Monday's
resolution empowers the eity a~
tomey to intervene on behalf of
tho city and ut the CAB to deny
tbe requests.
flee •'or be silenced in other
ways" may lead collrt offlclalf to
videotape statements trorr/ at
least four witnesses prior to the
trial.
Murder cbarces a1aln1t elabt
defendants, four of whom remain
at large, were transferred to
Superior Court Monday after
harbor municipal court Judge
Selim Franklta denied a defense
attorney req~est to keep the~
Uminary heating at the lower
court level
Attorneys for 1uapect1 "Jetr'f
Fiori. Raymond Resco, Antbon1
Marone Jr. and Alexander Kulik
sou1bt to keep tbe case In
municipal court in order to cross·
examine witnesses.
Althouah Judge Franklln said
he woul~ be inclined to support
the defense alt4rJleys • request,
he opted for the traditional court
procedure In which cases are
transferred to Superior Court
when grand jury lndictments
have been banded clown.
Suvertor Court Judie BQbert
P. Kneeland wu uslaned to ban·
CSeeBOVAN, Paco~)
Funeral services arescboduled
Wt!dnesdu for former Newport
Harbor High School prtnel.,at
Joaeph Hamblet. wbo died Mon·
dayatthea&"eof15.
Mr. Hamblet. who came to
Harbor H1Jb u a biology teacher
in 1931. a year after it opened, was
an elder of St. Andrew•a
Pretbytertan Qiurcb and helped
establish the Orange Coast YM·
CA. and the Jol>lli\ Boys ftanch in TrabucoCanyon.
He ntWd u vlee Principal of
Rarbot. IDp tot 13 years before
becomini tbe school's •ecood
princfpallnl955. Hebeldtb•tpast
unW 1983 wben he became direc-
tor of tmtruction for tbe old
Newi>ort Harbor Union Hllh
School District. He retired ln ~. Mr. Hamblet alao was ex·
ecuUve directot of the Newport
Beach U6lted Fund for several
yeart prior to Its merger with a W-.erU~ Way effort. So YIU aittlve Jn the Newport
Harbor Kiwanis Club and the
Maaonic 14dte of Santa Ana as
well as tever_al pr.of esslonal edueattonorsanlutiona.
<See11n'ES, Pace A!)
.U.S.
. WASJUNGTON (AP> -The.
Carter admlnlstratl~ officlally
aMounced today lll acceptance
of EDPt'• lnvUaUon to atund
talks thl• WHhnd In Cairo
aimed at an Arab·l•rHU 1ettle·
ment in the Middle East.
Acknowled1ing that the U.S.
role haa dlmlnlshed, tbe ad·
mh:ll.ltnUon Hld lt rem1ln1 ln·
terated ln playin' a conatruc·
ttve role In preparina for the co~
venln1 of a peace conference m
Geneva.
Hodd.in& Carter III, the State
Department 1pokeaman, sald the
United States would be
repreaent.ed in Cairo "at the ex·
put level" but that the offklal
who will lead the U.S. dele1at1on
is still to be selected.
Carter said the choice would be
··someone who haa background
12 Killed
and competence beavily in the
area." •
Am°"' the possJble represen·
\atlve1 beinte men\lOJJe.d a;e
Phlllp c. Habib, undersecretary
of slate tor poUUeJI •ftaln, and
Alfred L. Atherton Jr., uslstant
secretary for the Near East.
Spokesman Carter speclftcal1y
ruled out Secretary of State
Cyrut R. Vance H the American
partkipant In the talkt called by
E1yptlan Prealdent Anwar 5adat.
So far, amon1 the parties in·
voJved direcUy In Middle Eut
diplomacy, only the United
States and larael accepted
Sadat's invitation lo meet lo lay
the groundwork for com·
prebensive negotiations in
Geneva.
·Fear Unites
Area Women
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fear is a common bond among young
women in northeastern Los Anceles.
Since a series of brutal murders in which nude or partially
clothed bodies of 12 women have been found strancled or raped along
highways, women have beiun lo walk each other home.
THEY AVOID HITCHHlXJNG AND take rape-prevention
classes. They don't han1 around the shopping mall like they used lo.
A 32-man special task force has been working on the cases ror
several weeks, recel vln1uplo1,000 tips a day from city residents.
The Glendale News-Preas hu offered a $.'500 reward ror inform a·
lion lead.int to apprehension of the killer and is printing an informa· lion blank for readers to send In.
"IF IT WASN'T FO& paytn1 my rent, I wouldn't be here," said a
19-year-old salesclerk who works at an Eagle Rock Shoppin1 Mall
record store. ·
A 12-year-old and 14-year-old who were am_on1 12 victims
were lastseen leaving the mall. · · r run lo my car after work and l don 't sit around and talk to peo·
pie.·' the young woman said Monday.
Like many women In the area who have been talking with re·
porters, she wu afratd to give her name.
"IT'S A REAUTY," she added. "I'd aay the younaer kjds are
down about SO percent in the mall. It used to be filled with lddl,
especially in the music store."
At Eagle Rock Hi&b School, a hospital community education
specialist has been talkin1 to aym classes about,rape and aelf· defense
The latest school newsletter s uggests that parents pick up their children after m1ht activities.
"THE GIRUi ARE BEING VERY cautious," said Asslr;tant
Principal Alta· Lee Avant, ''They have n4k become alarmed, but they 'are concerned."
Some young women admllalarm, however.
"The kids talk about it a lot," said a 14-year-old Eagle Rock stu·
dent. "They'reacared. They Jokij.aboutlt, butthal's Just their way ot hiding their tear."
A 16-year-old student said her friends are bein& more cautious.
"NO ONE IDTCHHIKES anymore," she said. "We don 'l go out
art er dark. I try to walk home with other air la.''
Los Angeles pol Ice have aald th al it 'a possible that at least some victims had been hltchhlklna. .
Students al St. IanaUus School attended by two oC the young
women touna rapea were wameo to be cauuous with stran1ers. A
similar wamJng was given by Loe Angeles school authorities.
"It 'a frightenlna, but I try not to think about it," said the 19-year·
old record a tore employee. ''That's ju.st what he wants. The more you
think abouUl, lbe more power you 1ive to blm.''
* * * * * * ,. ...... _ .... J
BODY DISCOVE~ED.
Westside Raplat case, but he flth ParkonOct.18. pointed out that three lndlviduaJ1
were ultimately arrested
separately and convicted of those
crimes.
The 32-man stran1ler task
fore• from u,. Loi Au1elea and GJt~al• poU~ departments. the
Lot Anaelea Count.J •herltt'a de-partment and th6 coroner's otnce w•• on Qle aceno.' Thtr• waa no immediate ln·
dfcatfon othow th• flrl dJtd. Tbe 1even other '1t1-, all raped
and 1tren•ltd, were:
-YolJnda Wllllam1, 11, found
oo Forttt lAwn Drtr• near or11-,
DAILY PILOT
• •
-
All Dolled llp
A study In white mink and diamonds, a flamboyant •
plantst Liberace points to a piano-shaped diamond-
studded wristwatch during ~ news conference at Lon·
don 's Palladium where he announced the details of his
April show at the theater next year.
Niguel Woman Plans
Nuclear Death Suit
A Laguna Niguel woman Is ex-
pected to file a wrongful death
suit In federal court Monday
seeking Sl million in damages for
lhe cancer-caused death of her
husband. exposed in 1957 to
radiation in nuclear teats.
Mrs. Alice P. Broudy, widow of
retired Marine •Corps Major
Charles Broudy, said in a
telephone lntervtew today she is
seeking the wrongful death ac·
lion, "to hall the proliferatio!' of
such tests," which she ~launs
killed her huaband.
Her husband died Oct. 27, more
than 20 years after he witnessed
an atomic explosion on the Yucca
Flats testing range in Nevada.
dous prolifieration of nuclear
contamination." than In rf'celv·
in,i: the settlement.
"What I'm really after is stop·
ping the spread of nuc lear
power plants and fallout and
nuclear waste around the
world."
• · 1 want to 1et enou1h people
mad about this thJng 10 they'll
write their congressmen and do
something about this horror."
She said that whlle above-
ground nuclear testing ended in
the early 19609, dan1ers remain
from below around level test.a.
Dr. Nolan Frfsiellt, Oraoae
County chalrrnan ot the
C•lifornia Republican Ataembly,
announced hit candidacy f« the
Republlcan nomlnatlon in tho
'13rd Aasernbly Olttrfct today.
Friuelle said tho dlatrlct,
which \ncludes HQnttn1ton
Beach, Fountain Valley~ pattl ot
Costa Mesa and Seal ntaoh t• ·
one ot Ifie Alstmbly dlatrllrtl th•l
can be won by RePUbllcaD&Jo
restore a blpartla~ Lell•letii~
·'The era ot low ex~taUont,
hi&h taxea, aotlbu1ane11 and
shrinklna job avallablUty Mids
more thouJhtful biputlsan de-
bate and fewer excu ea for lnac·
Uon, ·• hesatd.
"Also, we've seen enou1h
policy ntp.fiops by Governor
Brown and tha&e han&inl on hia coatia~. to have any faith ten ln
what standards be may bave
orlclnally cllllmed," • Frtazelle said.
Friaiette. •Newport Beae1'pp.
tomttrllt and a re4tdtnt ot co.ta Mesa, pat\'Uid ANembly tncum-
bent Oennla Maaaera lo th•
Brown' eamp at a 'Fount.In
Valley Pf• conf erenc• called .
amon1 i>robatlon eblefl In
Califomla.
In adcilUon, Helai.D1 continued,
Mlsa Grier recenUy wu offered
a $45,219-a-year position evalual·
m1 the impact a cutoff in federal
funds would have on county
youth programs.
He contended that position.
which carried leaa responslbWtf.
than the probation chief'• Job, o ·
fered a '6,0001alaryhicreue.
Supervisors Chairman Thomu
Riley noted that poaitlon WU OD·
ly a temporary one, Umlted to 18
montht.
Riley also contended the $.15
percent pay increase waa consl•·
tent with salary bikes 1r1nttd
most other county employes and
called tt a coat-of-llvina lnereaM.
He aaid Helslne was ar1uinJ
for a merit pay increaat whlcl\ wasn·~ the l11ue before
s upervl19rs.
·'It bu to do with the 1alary ot
the chlef probation omcer,"
Helaina contlnued.
He said Mlss Grler'a repula·
lion and career of more tban 20
years are "on the line.''
"She will take every step lo
protect them both," he Hid.
,,....,._,.J
BOVAN~ ·:.
die the arralpment Friday on ·
cbarJet contained ln a 1rand
Jury lnd.lc:tment. .
Def eose and prosecuUon at. '
torney1 •8reed Morutay to have i
at least tour wltoes•11 ln ~ ~ 1 aive t11t1mony, POHlbly
vldeot.'*'1 for preH"aUon ln #
caae they art later unavallabJe.
Deputy Dl1trlct Attorney. ~
Dav• Cart.er aald statements &N '
e1tP"ted to be taken from Frank 1
Ro11l, Anthony Marone Sr., Rtck' WllUa and Debbie Addison.
J , ......... A.J
FML ••.
I
r
1
r.
!\
There wu no ladder tn place at•.
the time, P<>lice Hid. ·
After the accident, construe-•
tlon workers covered up the
openJn1 with a plywood board,
poUcotald
The then-Lieutenant Broudy
was in a trench about three miles
from ground zero, and his wire
and doctors claim the blast Is re-
lated to cancer of the lymph
nodes discovered less than a year
ago. He was also exposed ~o
radiation from debris on a ship
towed from the Marshall Islands
to San Francisco ln l!M8.
~ aciti dewelfY Compa ny
The retired offjcer was so weak
last September he could not
walk. HJa wife said his weight
dwindled to a little more than 100
pound1 and he had to sell his
Huntlnlt<>n Beach bicycle shop.
Mts. Broudy said she is more
interested In getting the word out ·
a bout what she calls ''the horren·
F,.._PageAJ
JAIL •••
rurlouah pro1rams, are often al·
lowed to serve their time through
jail weekends and they earn ex·
tra time off and privlle1es by .
such activities as sew\ng," Gates
said.
"CertaJnl)'.\ we could imple-
ment an equat rl&hts pro1ram on
tbe lint• au11•1ted in th•
lawautt," Gatti aald. "8ut I
think It'• unneoea1ary and I thlDk. the taxpa,yenr will toream when. . they areiotdwbaUt would coat. '1.,
•
IJl/\Mt 1NU 1:1;1iKl Ii:, • J! ',"Jt l H'r' • ~ lN I /\t; I
CHRISTMAS GEMS
AND JEWEt°RY
Outstanding diamond
solitaire earring• In all 111zes
and shapes, ranging from
........ 010
E>equJelte •h ce rong
baguette and round
dlamono. Mt In platinum
IJC~U.710
-, ~
..
~-•
,.,
·!" ,,.,
•If
' 3TOCKS I BUSlNE S
COMPOSQ't; TRA:NSACTI6NS
~. No4lemller 3 . ,,.,., N OAI\. Y PILOT
SEMINARS ALREADY HA VE BEBN beld In Atluta,
Little Rock, Wichita, O.nver, Dallu and HOUiton. SWl to
come are mee.tinp ln Hlttford, Waab1n.ftoot MelllDhla and
Mlami. More ract. 11bout the aedllnan are avalla&le frOm
Barbara B. Dunn, c11,.tor of Women la BUllnaa ud
Consumer Affaln, SBA, 1"1 L. St. N.W .. Wuhlqton, D.C.
~18.
Two-day seminata for wome alrucb lD business wDI
be held in the SBA's reclonal oMtel between Juua&ry and
May 1978.
The San Francisco reclonal Q(flce ot tbe SBA baa a Uat
of spring dates. Emphull wlU be pteced on lmpt'OYtrl1 tM
opportW'UUes for women to bld 1uecesst\illy for covenunent
coattam and on d.lssemlnau.n, procW'tment lntormaUoQ.
"The SBA La coma
to have a -new look' -
internally, with areater
stress on the appoint.
ment and promotion or
women, and e~ally,
Money's
Worth
wlth a stronc dfftnltlve ' program to encouraie ._. ____ _,,
busin• ownenblp by womea, .. Ms. Dunn ~ya.
··wE ABE COIOll'ITED 1'0'1118 U8E of SBA ... rna·
jor instrument to uatu women ln 1alnina ~ Into the
tmall bullnas MC?tar."
At the start., th11 cam pa.Ip ls to be aeared to lhort·tenn ..
coals to ~ent SBA prioritl•. A=cram wW be de-veloped ln an ~• wbere womm have ezperlenee.' ~
Focus will be on needs of women see bullMa loans'
lhrouah the Small BueJnea IJlveetD2ent Com901 procram. '
Retired business volunteen and act.l" •xe«ine will
provide counseJJnc on mana1ement aitd ttalnlng maoacers.
The SBA will lncreue the number ot women loan otficen ,
and supervisory otflcers to provide more aena!Uvity to the
problems WQmen lace ln business.
OVER 'ftlE LONGER TEaM, 'nlE 88.\ strateCY will
be keyed to developlnc specltlc procrama.
The need for the proc,ram ii dramatized by these
1taU1Uca:
-Wblle women make ~P 51..3 pereent ot tho naUoa's
populaUon, tbey 0*11 only •.6 pe~nt of the buatnesaea. -ot all SBA loans last year. C)ftfy 11 ptreent -eat to
women: llldollarterms, tbeproportloawulpetftnt.
-IN PISCAL 1m, LOANS to women bave been 1vera1-
lnl about27 percent less ln dollar amount. than other loam.
-In 1976, OQly 11.9 percent of those COUDHled tbrOUCh
the SBA Management Assistanceproarams were women.
Market .Still Hobbled ·~
By Deficit Report
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market feD aharplJ todlJ
in moderate trading, cont.inutnc Us downward trend fot' a
second COl'lffCuUve sessloa.
The Dow Jones avera1ee of 30 laduatrtaJ atocu f dl 12S>
pointsto827.27.
Analysts said • number of f actd'I were lnfh1e12ehi, the
market. which ended a week-lonf rally Koaday, u theiov·
ernment announced another huge U.S. trade dctllclt for tbe
month of October.
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11 I ~U.-\ \
IVENIHO ~~l~OHIWI
I "A Oreem To Dteam" D THE AVEHGEA8
8twd fall• Into enemy han41
and E~ la cut down to .U.
I MICK&Y MOU8& ClUD
I SUPERMAN
Mon.yTo8Um"
VILLA ALEGRE
!HO BewrTCHED
"Allerglo To Macedonian Dodo
Blrd1"
• ADAM-12
''Tllklng It Euy"
G FREEHAND SKETCHING
"Aerial PerepecttYM"
e:00e cas NEWS DG NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI
Dr. Br11ekett trlee to pereuade a
mother to keep her deformed
baby. II BASKETBALL
.., Cleveland Cavalle<I YI. Los
I Angela Lak8'1
G) THE BRADY BUNCH
Trooblel beset glrl-hater Bob·
by when he 11 killed by a llttle
I girl WhO later reporta ahe hu
themump1.
G) THE ROOKIES
Lieutenant Ryker take• a per-
1onal lntere1t In finding ttle vic-
tim of a kidnapping.
I ID ZOOM
• 1 ID AS MAN BEHAVES
a.te•• lelce1
Ron Howard arrives
home after a
fraternity initiation
looking somewhat
like a dishevel ed
c bieken on Happy
Days, tonight at 8 on
ABC, Channel 7.
G 9 HOLL YWOOO
SQUARES
G) THE BRADY BUNCH
Jan, bellevlng ah• 11 being
Ignored, buya herHlt a
brunette wig.
8) LET'S ti,tAKE A DEAL ID LA, INTERCHANGE
"Inside Straight"
Pot• and Ralph are black·
balled, Rldlle la told not to
UIOdate with them.
• CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS
Guelt: Steve l.awr9nce.
8 MOVIE
1 "A Convereatlon With Or. Mur-
1 ray Banks" I NEWSCHECK
THE GONG SHOW
8:00 Cl) THE 1'1TZPATRICK8
***'~ "Huah, Huan, SWeet Charlotte" (1985) Bette Dam,
o~ de Havtuand. A young
woman'a mind la •ffected When
her married lover la fOund
dead. (2 hrs.) 1 @.) ABC NEWS e:,a t) MOVIE
***'~"In Harm's Way'' (Part
1) (1985) JOhn Wayne, Kirk
Douglas. An oot-of-oommlsslon
Navy man la aaalgned to cap-
ture Important enemy-held
Island•. (1 hr .. 30 min.)
G) MY THREE SONS
When Chip adopt• a shoulder
length hatr-1ty1e, Steve decldea
not to be a 1tr1ct father but to
g_t_ve the boy more attention
fD OVER EASY
Eartha Kitt; planting bulb•: the
Senior Talent Opportunity
program; polltlcal power within
the community. ID GROWING YEARS
' "The Chlld'1 Mind" (Part 2)
Cl) CBS NEWS
ltDl MERV GRIFFIN
GuHtt: Bernadette Petera,
' Sally Fleld.
7:00 8 NBC NEWS 8 UARSCLUB fJ ABC NEWS
t m I LOVE LUCY
"Ttie Adagio" tm ADAM-12
Ottlcer Reed Is assigned 10
write a magazine article about
hi• partner. fD MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'11) EARTH, SEA ANO SKY
"Earth History"
Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH
7:215 fJD PLEDGE BREAK
Regularly scheduled program-
ming may be delayed due to
pledge break•.
7:30 Q CANDID CAMERA 0 NEWLYWEDOAME
The fesUvttles surrounding Max
Fltzpatrk*'• Flrat Communion
are marred when hi• father la
auapended from hi• Job.
Tl\almu1 Raaulala, Donald
Moffat. Robert Hogan guest
atar. It AMERICA SALUTES THE
QUEEN
Bob Hope wUI be Joined by
Julie Andrews, Rudolf Nureyev.
Yoko Morishita, Paul Anka,
HarT)' Belafonte, Cteo Laine.
John Oankworth, Shirley
Maclalne, Alan King, The
Muppet•, Rich little, The
Brotherhood of Man and Tom-
my Cooper In a gala tribute to
Queen Elizabeth It celebrating
Her MaJeaty'• Sliver Jubilee.
8 MOVIE *** "The Road To Rio" (1047) Bing Cro1by. Bob Hope.
The llves of two musicians take
a turn for the better after they
stow away on an ocean llner. (2
hrs.)
fJaJ HAPPY DAYS
"Bye Bye Blackball" Richie,
Potafe and Ralph are pledges
at the same fraternity, but when
Ratings Guide
IMovie -raot.d «C'Onllno to bo• Ollke ~ _,., IM TV ua
lueloed"'. (r!llc.)
•••• -Excellent
••• -Very Good •• -Good . ~. -Fair
* -Poor
e SPECIAL
'"TM Good Otd [)eye Of Redlo''
Steve Allen hotts a ~
trlbut. to tM fll'lt fifty )'MI'S Of
broedcutlng.
ID PAREJff EFFECTIVEHE.88
"Letting Go" A dlacuulon of
power, valoee and reeponaiblll-
ty helpt In prob*n lltuatlona.
8:30. 0 LAVERNE & SHIRLEY
"The Stakeou1" The girts allow
FBI agents to UN their apart-
ment to obaefw the 9CtMtlee
of a oounterfelter, not expect-
ing Carmine to be a prime
au1pect.
G) CROSS-WITS
G OVEAEAS'V
Eartha Kitt; planting bulbe; the
Senior Talent Opportunity
program: polltlcal power within·
the community. •
8:45 II CONCENTRATION
0:00 I) Cl) M"A*8"H
An offloer wtth a cold-blooded
knack for predicting c;uuattlee
prompt• a vlolent reaction from
Hawkeye. Whtie Charles .,,,_..
embWTUllng reeultl from con-.
aumlng a gourmet feat.
• 0 THREES COMPANY
"Janet'• High 8ohool Sweet-
heart'' Janet IOMa her OOOI
when th• groovy catnP}I•
Adonll of her high 9Choof cMya
shoWa up tor a date and Jack
and awteey OOl!lplre to leave
lhtm llAont In the apattmen1.. e MERY GRIFFIN
Gueata: Bernadette Pet..-.,
Sally Raid, Dody Goodman,
Cheryl neg..
9 MASTERPIECE THEATRE
"I, Claudlua: What Shall We Do
Class of ·Vietnam
Veterans Profiled on ABC Special,
ByTOMJORY
NEW YORK <AP) -"If you were a
Vietnam veteran you were suspect,"
Ken Delino recalled oC his return from
the war io Southeast Asia. "There
was something wrong with you.
maybe,"
Ken Deli no was one or 20 or so young
men from the Class or '64 at Chatham
}flgh School in New Jersey wbo went
to Vietnam. "People who didn't go to
World War II and Korea were the ones
who were strange." he said. "In Viel·
nam it was the ones who went who
were st.range."
Several of Delino's classmates re-
turned Crom Vietnam scarred or dis-
abled, one spent time as a POW -and
two dldn 't return at all.
Delino's passionate commentary on
the plight or the V1elnam veteran ls a
comltlon thread running through
"The Class that Went to War," an
ABC News Closeup scheduled for
Thursday evenln&. Th• hour·long
documentarty features Dellno end
several ot bi1 cluamata.
effect of the war on a community with
which be was intimately involved.
''And the result was a kind ot an·
tilhesis or how you see the Vietnam
veteran ~toften." be said. "Utbey
get coverage at aJJ, it's usually of a
bunch or guys standing on a street cor-
ner complaining.
.. WE TOOK THE opposite approach
and tried to present the Vietnam
veteran as the kid next door, tho
hum an side of the veter an, to see a lit·
lie of his background and so on."
The result ts the movln1,
sometimes disturbing story of yoiung
men who returned home, many Of
them disillusioned by the war, aonw
broken by it. and were met by people
anxious lo forget what bad happened.
"I hope it's not unpleasant or Ull•
comfortable to watch," said Gerdau
or the documentary, "but· I would
hope it's a little sad."
Gerdau brought e aenslUvity to the
subject and Its locale -be lives there
today with hia wile and two children
-"and wttb this lclnd of 1bow, the de-
sire is to do something veey penonal.
-
About ~?" Claudlua la
acMMd'lO conttnue pllylng the
Idiot whllt plant .,. made for
Na~· LMa attempte to in.u~bethw auocet11en to
the • " f:10. lftONllD8
CtMI ~ encountara a 1.,..
oenou otd tlttne at an art
lt!OW.
9:i08(1) O~DAYATA TIMI
"S.,l>ar&'• ft"""d" IJll'ber&
• .,. • high PrtOt for ktndneh
..., .. dllPnt• t'tlndly
claetmat• '"°'*out tor help. Scott COlombr gueet ...,.._
(Part 1 of2) eO SOAP
(Epleode Ei.v.n) ...... 4ak•
• flnn ltand IQ&ll\lt her phllao-
detfng hUlbll'ld: Oonnne oon-
fronta Peter about hi• betuMor,
Bwt end Mwy Pf9Plf• for a
tong..enUdpated event. (Net·
work ecMMa Plf*\tal dlacr•
tlon)
• ALMS OF PERSUASK>N
"Mlllhou9e" Einlle D' Antonio
cnatld thfl fAm, wtllch Juxte-
poeee ~ docu-
meni.ry footage Of then P,.._
dent~ with~. comic
fllmmattirtll.
10:00 8 (I) LOU GRANT
The 91,1bjeat fof Biiiie Newman'• ..,. ot artlcttt le • frightened
and unwtlllng batter9d wtfe
iulle Kavner).
NEWS
0 'AMfLY
"Llt>oura ct Love" An amo-rooa boa lady (Samantha
Egg#) ~-Wlllle hu too much potentlal to ...,,.," .,
errand bOy and the you11g man
auddtnly find• hlmMlf pro-
moted and punued.
• GIT8MART
Agent 90 tlGddtntally ~
that lhe 18 wortclng for KA08.
ID 8PECW.
"The Mwry Widow" 8evefty
Slit., Allan Tllua and Andrew
Fokll are fMtur9d Jn thlt pro-
duction of the San Diego
10:15rNEW8
10:30 CD e NEWS
11:00 8 D 8 (I) Ill NEWS 8 HOU.VWOOO CONNECTIOM
II MOVIE **'A "Th• Tall Women"
(1"9) Anoe Baxter, Marla
Per8chy. Seven women, the
sole IUrvfvora of an lndlan
muaacre, attempt to reach
aafety. (2 hra.)
G) THE 000 COUPLE
Felix plana • aurprtM birthday
:? party for o.car, Who k>lthee
• birthday '*1*· e HONEYMOONERS
Allee and Trude try to prove
that • happy man1age .. doing
thlngl wlttl thel.r husband.a.
11:30.CI) OBSMOVIE ** "Night Terror" (1018)
Valerie Harper, Richard
Romanua. The tone wftneas to a
hlgtlwmy patrotman'a murder le
'9lentlal •'Y puftUed by the psy-
chopaitlkl kill«. (fU 8 TONIGHT
Hoitt Johnny car.on. G~
OCllY Parton, Euoene Fodor,
Or. WIUlam NoWi.
MORH1NG
12:00 e 1WIUGHTZONI!
'1he Jeopardy Room·· -~FERNWOOO Ence oon~ an affair, 8al
fixes bfeQfaat for Cathy and
Penny; Wanda ....W.V.Ota home
Rvte ** "King Of The Wiid
Stalllona:' (1050) ~Mont·
gomery, Diane Brewtter. A wtd-
ow llld '*' 90l't ... protected
by a wlld lt.llUon. ( 1 hr.. GO
mine.) e DICK CAVETT
Gueet: S.J. Perelman. humor-
ist.
12:30G MOVIE **'A "The tnvlllble Woman"
(10<40) John Barrymore Jr), Vlr-
gll')la Bruce. Gan;9tn .tternpt
to o-Jn a aclentlat'a etCf'et for
lnvtalbllltyl.(1 ht,. 25 min.) • MOV11: .
**'A "War Of The WildcaW'
(1943) JoM Wayne, Martha
Scott. Two men tight over oll
right&. (2 hra.)
1:00 e TOMORROW au.t: Hetwy Miiier, author of
"Tropic: of Cancer." D ISPY
Stunned to leem that the
Madonna portrait they ~
delfwred Is a fake, Kelly, Scott
and Katie c.twr1ght concoct a
deaperate ICherne to correct •
their mlltake.
1:158 Cl) KOJAK
"Where Do You Oo wt., You
Hev. No Aace To Go°1"\ A hot-
tempered oonatructon ~conf ronta a proa~lr•
ernplqyer, txlt lnadv~
klflt him In a fight. (R)
1:30• MOVIE * * "The Public Analt" (1ff2)
Myron McCormick, Edward
Binns. A c:ruaadlng aenator la
tubJec:ted to a Vldoua tun'lOf'
campaJgn by a lobbylat aroup.
(!ht., 30 min.)
1!388 NEWS 1:d51 NEWS 2:00 NEWS
• MOYI£ **~ "JoftMJ'Ttouble'' (1tS7)
Ethel Banytnol .. Cd K-.
way. A woman contl..,_ to
IMICh for her fonG-cTt••lnQ
•• ~min.) • * * "The Wortd In Hit A1m9'• (1952) Grego,y Pede, Ann
Btyth. A pr1ncaee falla In kM
with a ... captain, but II kid-
napped by • '*9d ~on
.Too Much SU118hine;
Gorshiri Moves East
By JAYSllABBU'IT
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In recent
years, tb1a town bu tilled up witb ex-
patriate New Yorkers who wort ln TV
and constantly lripe you can't 1et
good corn beef on rye anywhere ln
Beverly Hilll.
But Frank Gorabln, tbe im-
pressionist, actor, comic and stnaer,
isn't one of them. Jn fact, after livinl
here 22 years, be packed up bis family wt Aupt and mond to Greenwich, Conn.
Greenwich Isn't far from Fon City.
Ira mainly known as the place to
wblcb New York advertisinf ex-
ecutives take the 5:-'0 train each~· ·
nln1. Utbetralnlsnmninl.
Wby did Gonblll, 43, move .a East?
•
•
.
t
• . "'
7
VOL. 70, NO. 333, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
body of a red-haired woman in
her 20s was found today dumped
beside a narrow windin1 Mt.
Washioeton road, and pollce said
•he appeared to bave been
ltran~led.
Pohce Lt. Dan Cboke said dis·
coloration around the neck. ot the
girl found on Clllt Dnv6 by a
!Mtighbor indicated th,t the girl
may have been 1trangled, ap.
paNntly ln a fashion similar to
the deaths of seven oth~r young
women found raped and
. stran,led since mid·October
wttbln a flve·mlle radius ol Glen-
dale.
Today's victlm was the third
found lnpte lli&hland Park area
in lOdaya.
"We don•t know whether this
<strangler) is one individual or
several individuals," Cooke said.
o.lty ............ "",,_,..
CONSTRUCTION CRANIHJFTS OUT BODY OF WORKER
Crane Eartler Wea UHd to Uft Out Another Man Who· Uved
1Safety Effort Ends
I
In Death in l~e
By PHIUP JtOSllARIN oe .. ~.._.l4Alf
A construction worker, sweep.
lng catwalks at an Irvine sewage
plant project as a safely measure
after another employee fell Mon-
day, backed into an o~n hole in a
catwalk and dropped to hls
~ath. Police said Leon Llamas, 64, of
Sen Fernando, fell 28 feet to the
concrete flooring or an open
sewage tank, striking the side of
his bead. He wa.s killed instantly.
. Both accidents at the Irvine
Ranth Water District project off
Michelson Drive are under In·
veatigation by a slate safely
agency. Jim Brown, district
manager ol California Occupa-
tionaJ Safety Health Act's
division of industrial safety, said
an lnvesU1ation or working con-
ditions al the site would take
several days.
Water district officials said
they were shocked by the acct-
dent.s, the most serious in district
history. The sewer plant expansion
project ls belns administered by
the VTN Corp., a major county
contractor. The construction con·
tractorisMaeconinc.
Only two hours before the fatal
accident, SO.year-old Bill Whlte
of Anaheim fell from scaffolding
atop the ironwork sewer vault.
White broke his back, and the
(See FALL, Pa1e A2>
'Silencllffl' Feared
Bovan Death Case .
Tales to Be Taped
Jury indictment.
Defenae and prosecution at·
torneys ~ Monday to bave
at leasUour wttneeses in the cue
giv• teaticnony, poulbly videota~. for preservaUon In
caae they~ later unavailable.
Deputy Dl1trlct Attorney,
Dave Carter aald atatementa are
· expec,t.ed to be taken from Frank
Rossi, Antbain.Y M•roneSr., Rick wnns and Debbie Addison.
... Ro11l has been trant«id lm-
(SM JOVAN. Pas• .U>
"There are •lmilaritles but the
tact that they are spread out and because of other clues which we
can't reveal, there may be more
than one strangler.
••1t could be two. three or four
dolni it," he add~
He 1ald a special strangler
taak force has been hampered
and frustrated In its lnvesUga ..
lion of the stop-and-go strangler
case because of the time it takes
to identify each victim before
their associates and habits can
be checked out.
Resldenu In tbe moderate-
Jncorne hllJ1lde nelchborhood
aald they heard dot• barking
loudly and persistently between 1
and 2 a.m. today, but no one re·
called hearing a car slop or pull
awn.
Unlike the other stop-and-so
strangler victl~, there wu no
•
apparent attempt made U, bide
this body, allhouah then was
brush nearby where the :victim's
killer could bave hidden her.
Cooke said pieces of glus,
cigaret&e butts, bathroom tissue.
and candy wrappers were beln1
collected along a 500-foot secUon
of the road. He said f nvestisators
would sift through them for any
kind of connection with the other
cases.
.. We're coins to put all thls
stuff through a computer and
cbeclc'out peoi>le who have done
thl1 aort of crlmo before, those
who aren't in prl5on now," Cooke
said. "But it could be aomeone
new or "8omeone from out ot
state. Wejustdon'tknow."
The lieutenant said the last
caae he could recall with ao many
women murder victims was the
<See BODY, Pate AJ>
Korean Plot Revealed
White House, Media,. Congress Payoffs Eyed '
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Aq
elaborate South Korean in-
telligence plan to plant an in-
telligence network in the White
House, hire collaborators in the
offices of congressional leaders.
and pay oft and manipulate U.S.
journalisu, professors and other
persons was relea.5ed today by a
House subcommittee.
The 23-page plan, approved by
the director of the Korean Cen-
tral Intelligence Agency in
December 1975, envlsloned
$100-a -month payoffs to at least
14 employes of the Whlte House,
the State and Defense . depart·
ments and the CIA. The payoffs
wer~ labeled "manipulation ex-
penses."
The money Included $20,000 to
be paid to four unidentified con-
gressmen in the form of $5,000
V.S. Accepts
lrwitation
w
To Cairo
WASIDNGTON tAP> -The Carter admlnlstration oftlclaUy
announced today its accept&nce
of Egypt's invi..,.tlon to attend
talks tbl1 weekend ln Cajro
aimed at an Arab-Israeli at'ttle-
ment iJ\ thee Middle East
Acknow~ that the U.S.
role has dhniniabed, tbe ad-
mlnlstratlor\ said it femalns tn..
terested in playlog a construe·
tlve role in preparing for the con·
venlng of a peace conference in
Geneva.
Hodding carter 111, the State
Department spokesmal'\, sald the
United States would be
represented ln Cairo "at the ex·
pert level" but that the official
who will lead the U .S delesation
is still to be selected.
Carter said the choice would be
"someone who bas background
and competence heavily in the
area."
Among the possible represen-
tatl ves being mentioned are
Phillp C. Habtb, undersecretary
of slate for political affaln, and
Allred L. Atherton Jr., assistant
secretary for the Near Ea.at.
Spokesman Carter specifically
ruled out Secretary of State
CyruJ R. Vance as the American
participant in the talka called by
Esyptlan President Anwar
Sadat.
So far, among the parties ln·
volved dltectly In Middle East
dtplomacy, only the United
States and Israel accepted
Sadat'1 lnvtteUon tq meet to lay
the sroundwork for com·
prebeoaive ne1otlatlon1 ln
Geneva.
Sadat..D>alntalna that a GeneYa
conference held without ade-
quate preparaUon moat likely
would end ln failure.
Unlted Natlon• Secretary ..
General Ktirt Waldheim atso an·
nounc.CS tOday that the YtorJd ON
1anhatlon would send a
repreaentaUve to the Cairo met~
iri1.
·contributions for their 1976 re-
election catnpaiens.
The plan also envisioned pay-ments of at least $53,000 for con-
1rea11 ional contrlbutlona and
"special manipulation" pay.
ments to at least 10 persons in an
effort to influence conaressional
support for South Korea.
The plan was released at
public hearings by a Houae ln·
ternational relations subcommit·
tee on KCJA activltles in the
United States.
It ~pparently was obtained
from Sohn llo Yount. who defect·
ed as the KCIA's staUon chief in
New York City last September
a nd who was the leadotr witness
at the hearlnu.
In an openln" statement. suh-committce chairman Donald M.
Fraser. (Minn.), accused the
KCIA of ''outright subversion" in
its effort to carry out the plan,
which wa to aaln support for tho
government of President Park
Chuns ·hee among U.S. leaden.
Fraser eave no lndicatlon ~w
much of the plan was actually
carried out.
However, a month afler the
plan wu distributed to KCIA
agents around the Unlted States,
the South Korean eflort to in-
fluence Congres.s and govern·
ment leaders wu being widely
exposed in U.S. newspapers.
One aubcommlttee member,
Rep. Wllllam Goodllns, CR·PL),
said Korean efforts to carry out
the plan apparently were cut
short by the publlclty.
Another three aides were to be
paid $100 a month to "strenethen
ties with W," said to be an un-
N~gii,el WomanPlam .
Nuclear Death Suit
A L8'Wl8 Niguel woman is ex·
pected to ftle a wronaful death
suit ln federal court Monday
aeeJdne $l mttllOl'l in damages for
the ~-caused death or ber
tiu1ban~, exposed ln 1951 to
radiattoo tnnuclear tests.
Mrs. Allee P. Broudy, wldowot
retired Madne Corps Major
CbarJH Jlroudy, aald in a
telephone in~mew today abe ta
1eekln1 the wrongful death ac-
Uon, ·~halt the prollfttation of
aucb teitl," whlcb &he claims
killed tier ~us band.
Her husband died Oct. '1:1, more
thtn ~. yean after be witnessed
an atoJDic ~losfon on tbe Yucca
FJatl teltial ranee ID Nevada.
Tbe then-Lieutenant 8roUdy
wu 1n • tnnoti aboutthi"H mllil
from cn;.ma uro, and bit wife
a~d docUlri claim the b1ut iJ re-
lated tO caocer: Of the lymp.
nodet ataeovered Jeu than a year 4 a10. He waa also ex99s~ to
radtauon mm dibril on a ahlp
towed frOin the Manhall lalan
to San Francisco in 19'8.
The retired officer was so weak
last September he coiald not
walk. His wife aaJd his welpt
dwindled to a little more than 100
pounda and be had to 1tU hll
HuntiJJltqb Beach bicycle aho~
Mn. Bi'oUdy aaid she ls more
interested in aetUng the word out
about wbat sh., calla "the horren•
<See DAMAGES, Pa1e AU
named State Department aide,
and another three persons ln the
Defense Department were to be' p~id tb6 $100 a month to "concen-
tratedly lnftltrate" the mllltary
aid dlvialontbere.
TheplanalsoenvisionedpQ'ing
five persons in U.S. intelligence
agencies $100 a month to
strengthen CQOPeration.
The plan envlsioned hiring
three '•paid collaborators" at
$500 a month in what was er-
roneously llsted as the "office of
the Speaker (Senate and House),
office of aecretarlat." Tbe plan envJsioned paying
. three unnamed White House
aides $100 a month to implant \he
intelligence network there.
Another goal of the plan was to
hlre at least two American re-
'(See KOREANS, Pate At)
Teen Girls
·Kidnapped
And Raped
Two ts.year-old Santa Ana
girla bitcbbild.os throulh Irvine
Monday were kldnaped and
raped repeatedly before they
were releaaed by their knife.
wieldina abductor in Carlsbad.
Poll~ 1aid the cbJldren were
not otherwise banned.
They sougtrt • mtlitary-looldng
man, 1$ to 21 years old, five foot
11 inches tall, 140 pounds, with
sbort, llgbt brown bilir.
The teenagers told police they
beean hitchhlklns along First
Street ln Tustin at about 9 p.m.,
teylng to get a ride to El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station. Pollce
were unable to 1ay whether the
girls Uveont.be bue.
Tbey were picked up by a man
drivlnt a belie Ford Galax.le
four-door car with a Utah license
plate.
They said be offered to take
them to the base, but instead pulled to the llde ot the freewa,y
at Sand Canyon Avenue in Irvine,
pulled a six·lncb hunUng lmlle
and a11aulted them.
-
Police laid they were told the
man forced one ot the lfrls to
drive whUe ho raped her com·
panlon in the back seat, and dur·
int a 1~bour drive to CarlJbad
forced the titb to change places "
several times. continually •bus· ·
tn1them.
When let out ot the car at
Carllbact offlc8"8 aald, the ilrls
called local pOl1ff who contacted
the lrvi.De department. Irvine of.
flcer1 clioVe to Carlsbad and took the ctrli to a loaal hospital for ex·
amlnat.ion t.Ddtnatment.
•
J2 Ktllefl
Area Wonien
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Fear is a common bond amoni younc
women m northeai.ttim Lob Anaeles.
Since a series of brutal murders ln which nu~ or parUally
c Jotbed bodies of 12 women have been found 1tran1led or raped alone:
highw ~s, women have begW'towalk eacbotber home.
THEY A VOID lllTCHIOKING AND take rape-preventlon
classes. They don 'l hang uround the shopping mall like they uised to.
A 32-man special task force has been workln& on the cases for
several weeks, receiving up to l,OOOtips a day from city residents.
The Glendale News· Press has offered a~ reward for tnforma-
taon leading to apprehension bf the kUler and Is printing an lnforma·
tioo blank for readers to send in.
·~WASN'T FOR paying my rent, I wouldn't be here," said a
U>-year-old salesclerk who works at an Eagle Rock Shopping Mall
record store. .
A 12-year-old and 14-year-old who were am_ong 12 vtctims
were last seen leaving the mall.
"I run to my car after work and I don't sit around and talk to peo-
ple ,·' the young woman s aid Monday.
Like many women m lhe area who have been talking w1lh re-
porters, she was afraid lo g1 ve her name.
Pete Takes Ott
munlty and alnad.Y b Ufted
tort the IU d UQ' &hat bas hud ~ JD\&fckr In·
dlctmenta emm!a-_ from the
Oct. 22 abo0tln1 dfalb of Bovan
outside a Newport Beacb
restaurant.
R°'•i told the grand Jury ta teatlmon)' _preserved Jn t.bo
tranacrlp'-that he wu one or
flVe men wtt.D were offerod
,000 to kSU Bovan and two
Othtr&:nCQ.
Rotal tdllfted that th• offer
wa1 made by principal• In
Prasadaiil Dtatributlni Ini.ma·
tlonal, Inc. The Newport Beach
firtn Js aald by local police to
havo connecUoos wllh an lo·
ternatlonal dru1 clittrlbutlnt or.
ganbatlao Qd 1'1th lbo Bare
Krishna relllious sect.
Poll co claim lbat tbe plot to kill
Bovan stemmed rrom Bovan'a
decision to kidnap Pra1tdam
leader Jlloxandtr K•llk and
hold him for ranaom.
Kulik, 2S, ol Newport Beach, is
the only suspect. currenUy f~ on
ball.
"IT'S A REALITY," she added. "I'd say the younger kids are
down about 50 percent in the mall. It used to be tilled with kids,
especially in the music store.'·
At Eagle Rock High School. a hospital community education
specialist has been talking lo gym classes about rape and self.
defense.
The latest school newsletter suggests that parents pick up their
children after night activities.
"Pete," a pelican who has been hangin1
around lhe Balboa Pavilion in NewPort
Harbor for several years, takes to the air
from the Pavilion dock to begin his daily
search for brenkfaat tiy, the bay. Pelicans
are grotesque birds that seem to be one of
nature's mistakes. But have you ever watched one fish?
Police a11ert that 1u1pect
Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, ol 19822
Brookhurat. St., HunU01ton
Beach, has admitted to belnt the
trtuerman ln the Bovan sJaYinJ.
Flori ls beln1 held •llbollt
poaslblUb' of ball, •bile auapecta
Marone and Resco remain in
custody l.n lieu ot $100,000 ball
each.
"TllE GIRLS ARE BEING VERY cautious," said Assistant
Principal Alla Lee Avant. ''They have not become alarmed, but they
ure concerned."
Some young women admit alarm, however.
"The kids talk about it a lot," said a 14·year-old Eagle Rock stu-
dent. "They're scared. They joke about il, but that's just their way o( h1dmglhe1rfear." Saddleback College otricials
are going to lobby for improved
bus transportaUon but they also
may consider erealine a shuttle
service for students who Jive in
the north end of their massive
district
A 16-year-old student said her f nends are being more cautious.
"NO ONE IUTCHlllKES anymore," she said. "We don't go out
after dark. I try t.o walk home with other girls." ·
Los Angeles police have said that it's possible that at least some
v1ct1ms had been hitchhiking ·
Students at St. Ignatius School attended by two of the young
women round rapea were warnea to De cauuous w1Ul strangers. A
s1m 1lar warning was g1 Yen by Los Angeles school authorities.
"ll 's frightening, but I try not lo think about It," said the 19-year-
old record store employee "That's just what he wants. The more you
think uboulit, the more power you give to him."
Trustee Harriett Walther was
appointed by her fellow trustees
Mo nda y to work with ad-
ministrators and lobby the
Orange County Transit District
<OCTD) for improved service to
* * * Frma Page A J
BODY ...
Westside Rapist case, but he .
pointed oul lhat three individuals '
w e r e ultimately arfeslet:I
separately and t•onvacted of those
crimes.
The 32-man strangler task
force from the Los Angeles and
Glendale police departments, the
Los Angeles County sheriff's de-
partment and the coroner's office
was on lhe scene.
There was no immediate in·
dieation of how the girl died.
The seven other girls, all raped
and strangled, were:
-Yolanda Williams. 21, found
on Forest Lawn Drive near Grif-
fith Park on Oct. 18.
-Juclilh Lynn Miller, 15, found
on a La Crescenta front lawn Oct.
31.
-Lissa Kastln, 21 , found in a
Glendale ravine Nov. 6.
-Kristina Weckler, 20, found
Nov. 19 in Highland Park.
-Sonja Johnson, 14, found
Nov. 20in Elysian Park.
· -Dolores Cepeda, 12, found
with Miss Johnson.
-Jane Evelyn KJng, 28, found
along a Golden State Freeway of-
framp near Griffith Park on Wed
nesday.
FroaPageAJ
DAMAGES. •
dous prolifieralion of nuclear
contamination," than in receiv·
ing the setUement.
"What I'm really after is stop-
p in& the spread or nuclear
power plants and fallout and
nuclear waste around the world.··
"I want to get enough people
mad about this thine so they'll
write their conaresamen and do
sometbine about t.hJa horror."
Prison Looms
Man Facing 607-year Term
NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) -A 32-year-old ollice
manager faces a maximum penalty of 607 years in
prison and fines of ur to $1.3 million after pleading
guilty to 186 counts o making threatening telephone calls.
Mitchell Beck withdrew his guilty plea to the
charges last summer after a judge refused to honor a
plea-bargaining arrangement under which the max-
imum penalty would have been three months in jail.
On Monday, Beck entered guilty pleas again, this
time with the understanding that sentencing would be
left to the discretion of Montgomery County Presiding
Judge Richard Lowe.
Assistant District Attorney Lois Hagarty showed
Lowe the transcripts of statements by four persons
who said they received threatening calls from Beck,
who allegedly demanded that they perform sexual
acts and describe them over the telephone.
Beck was arrested Dec. 15 about six months after
state and local police and Bell Telephone security of·
ficers set up an elaborate computerized telephone
monitoring network, pollce said.
Frona Page 1
KOREANS PLOT. I • • porters, try lo win s upport
specifically amon1 rePQrters at
the New York Times,
Washinif,on Post and ChrisUan .
Scfence Monitor and
"manipulate" two news or-
ganizations, the names of which
were deleted from the copies of
the plan distributed.
The plan listed sizable
"manipulation expenses" for
trying to win over the reporters,
but the li1Un1 did not make clear
whethet Ulese were to be outright
payolta.
The plan also envleoned con·.
verting s~veral university pro·
fessors, including one at Harvard
Univeroity, to support South
Koreau Presldent Park Chung.
bee's governmen~
port or eight U.S. senators and i8
House members and contacted a
total of 26 senators and 70 House
members .
Besides the $18,000 for the
$500-a-month payments to three
persons In congressional leaders'
offices, the plan envisioned pay-
ing S20,oooror is.ooo contributions
to four members of Congress and
$9,000 for apparent "special
maniuulaUon" of six persons In
two congressional oftlces.
Fraser said $750,000 was
earmarked ln another KCIA plan
in 1976.
She said that while above·
ground nuclear testJng ended tn
the early 1960s, danaers remain
from below ground level teata.
OlllANOI COAST M The KCIA claimed ID the plan
. that lt had already woo the 1up.
Board Meet
Slated on
4Programs DAILY PILOT
Saddleback Valley Unlfied
Sebool Dlatrict tn&atees will meet
at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday to con·
elder four pro&l'anu they •W be asked to &et oo next week.
the main campus in Mi1aton
Viejo.
She and the administrators
also were asked to study other
methods, including a 1buttJe
service, to provide transporta-
tion between the pre1ent campus
and the Irvine facilities which
are scheduled to open in the fall.
The trustees' action came after
Mrs. Walt.her, a Tustin resident,
reported that lC she were a stu·
dent it would cost her $2,208 just
to drive to lhe college for four
semesters.
Computing her car costs at a
rate of 1S centa per mile for the
46-mile round trip from her
home, she said, It would cost her
an addHional $6.90 each time she
went to the main campus for
registration, counseling, use of
the library or attendance al e
campus event.
Predicting that the costs ror
students from the Tustin-Irvine·
Laguna area will get even
higher, Mrs. Walther recom·
mended that the district provide
u shuttle bus service between the
two cam~sites.
She proposed that the district
use its vans, which will be used
anyway to carry book• and
materlals between the situ, to
tramPQrt student.a a.ncl faculty
mem hers on a reaular aebedule.
No estimate of the cost of p~
vidinl the Ml'Vice wu given.
However, Mn. Walther SUI·
gested four ways of flnancin1 the
shutUe. She said parking fees for
all students. ''perk and ride"
fees or rares and passes could be
established. Or, abe said, the
service could be provided free
with the cost bome by the district
or student fees.
Tbe trustee, who waa appoint·
ed to the colleee board last
month, said lbe service could
prove a financial benefit by help-
ing to increase enrollment, re-
duce the need tor dupUcatlon of
services and save mlleage relm·
bursementa.
She said it also could provide
addltjonal employment op-
portunities for students and ena·
ble the students to use tMlr
transportation Ume for 1tudytng
and aocializing.
She said the shuttle service
also would be nfer and more
convenient for night students and
the physically handicapped
because the stops could be at well
lighted, •helt.l'ed places.
Monday, Flori'• attorney
David Brickner entered a plea ot
not 1utlty to drue cbariea •••lost hlt client. Flori was ar-
reated by Costa Mesa police, aJ.
leaedly in po11e111lon of cocaine.
Brickner also den.led that h1a
client waa a federally relocated
wltnesa, but admitted tbat a
"vendetta'' bu been l.asued by
an unknOWD party aialn.at Fiori's tam Uy.
Kullk alao faces separate drug
charges stemmina from hts ar·
rest In Mission Viejo. Kulik re·
portecUy was found sleepint in a
leased •• ooo Stuts automobile
with t.l pounds of nearly pure
heroin in the car.
sun betns aouaht are Kulik'•
wlte, Elate, Roy Richard. J01eph
Davt1 and Josepb Fedorowskl.
Protecutor Clift l>avil aatd Mon·
day ibat1'e e~petta Davia to be at•
rested soon by the FBI. Fellow
prosecutor Uave Carter said
Davls II not in the immediate area.
Toro Boat Stolen
A boat valued by the vicUm at ~.500 bu been stolen from the
rear yard ot an El Toro home.._
Oraqe County sheriff'• omcen
saJd the theft was reported by
Joeepb John Smith, 48, of 24162
Larkwood Drive. They aaJd ~ wu lnalde the bome at the Ume.
~ aciti dewe1ry Company
!ll/\MClf\!() l~l\<Jt<.l 1c; • .II WI l f{Y • I IN! /\H I
t ; "• ) e f ~ I ~
CHRISTMAS GEMS
AND ·JEWELRY
Outstanding dl1mond
solitaire earring& in au e1zea
and •h8'*', r1nglng from
SIOt.Sl,000
.. . Exqut11te whHe rt>ng
baguette and round
diamonds Mt In platinum
&JC ...... U.Ht •
Beautiful Ai..tra1ien fire ope! wUh
d11monda. tet In 14 karat yelloW
gold
\
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